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The response of heterotrophic activity and carbon cycling to nitrogen additions and warming in two tropical soils
Authors:DANIELA F CUSACK  MARGARET S TORN  WILLIAM H McDOWELL  WHENDEE L SILVER
Institution:1. Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, University of California – Berkeley, 137 Mulford Hall #3114, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA;2. Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, 1 Cyclotron Road, Berkeley, CA 94720, USA;3. Department of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of New Hampshire, 38 College Road, Durham, NH 03824, USA
Abstract:Nitrogen (N) deposition is projected to increase significantly in tropical regions in the coming decades, where changes in climate are also expected. Additional N and warming each have the potential to alter soil carbon (C) storage via changes in microbial activity and decomposition, but little is known about the combined effects of these global change factors in tropical ecosystems. In this study, we used controlled laboratory incubations of soils from a long‐term N fertilization experiment to explore the sensitivity of soil C to increased N in two N‐rich tropical forests. We found that fertilization corresponded to significant increases in bulk soil C concentrations, and decreases in C loss via heterotrophic respiration (P< 0.05). The increase in soil C was not uniform among C pools, however. The active soil C pool decomposed faster with fertilization, while slowly cycling C pools had longer turnover times. These changes in soil C cycling with N additions corresponded to the responses of two groups of microbial extracellular enzymes. Smaller active C pools corresponded to increased hydrolytic enzyme activities; longer turnover times of the slowly cycling C pool corresponded to reduced activity of oxidative enzymes, which degrade more complex C compounds, in fertilized soils. Warming increased soil respiration overall, and N fertilization significantly increased the temperature sensitivity of slowly cycling C pools in both forests. In the lower elevation forest, respired CO2 from fertilized cores had significantly higher Δ14C values than control soils, indicating losses of relatively older soil C. These results indicate that soil C storage is sensitive to both N deposition and warming in N‐rich tropical soils, with interacting effects of these two global change factors. N deposition has the potential to increase total soil C stocks in tropical forests, but the long‐term stability of this added C will likely depend on future changes in temperature.
Keywords:C turnover  microbial enzymes  oxidative activity  Q10  radiocarbon  roots  soil respiration
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