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1.
Inputs and losses of nitrogen (N) were determined in dairy cow farmlets receiving 0, 225 or 360 kg N ha-1 (in split applications as urea) in the first year of a large grazing experiment near Hamilton, New Zealand. Cows grazed perennial ryegrass/white clover pastures all year round on a free-draining soil. N2 fixation was estimated (using 15N dilution) to be 212, 165 and 74 kg N ha-1 yr-1 in the 0, 225 and 360 N treatments, respectively. The intermediate N rate had little effect on clover growth during spring but favoured more total pasture cover in summer and autumn, thereby reducing overgrazing and resulting in 140% more clover growth during the latter period.Removal of N in milk was 76,89 and 92 kg N ha-1 in the 0, 225 and 360 N treatments, respectively. Denitrification losses were low (7–14 kg N ha-1 yr-1), increased with N application, and occurred predominantly during winter. Ammonia volatilization was estimated by micrometeorological mass balance at 15, 45 and 63 kg N ha-1 yr-1 in the 0, 225 and 360 N treatments, respectively. Most of the increase in ammonia loss was attributed to direct loss after application of the urea fertilizer.Leaching of nitrate was estimated (using ceramic cup samplers at 1 m soil depth, in conjunction with lysimeters) to be 13, 18 and 31 kg N ha-1 yr-1 in a year of relatively low rainfall (990 mm yr-1) and drainage (170–210 mm yr-1). Drainage was lower in the N fertilized treatments and this was attributed to enhanced evapotranspiration associated with increased grass growth.Nitrate-N concentrations in leachates increased gradually over time to 30 mg L-1 in the 360 N treatment whereas there was little temporal variation evident in the 0 (mean 6.4 mg L-1) and 225 (mean 10.1 mg L-1) N treatments. Thus, the 360 N treatment had a major effect by greatly reducing N2 fixation and increasing N losses, whereas the 225 N treatment had little effect on N2 fixation or on nitrate leaching. However, these results refer to the first year of the experiment and further measurements over time will determine the longer-term effects of these treatments on N inputs, transformations and losses.  相似文献   

2.
Nitrogen (N) fixation in moss‐associated cyanobacteria is one of the main sources of available N for N‐limited ecosystems such as subarctic tundra. Yet, N2 fixation in mosses is strongly influenced by soil moisture and temperature. Thus, temporal scaling up of low‐frequency in situ measurements to several weeks, months or even the entire growing season without taking into account changes in abiotic conditions cannot capture the variation in moss‐associated N2 fixation. We therefore aimed to estimate moss‐associated N2 fixation throughout the snow‐free period in subarctic tundra in field experiments simulating climate change: willow (Salix myrsinifolia) and birch (Betula pubescens spp. tortuosa) litter addition, and warming. To achieve this, we established relationships between measured in situ N2 fixation rates and soil moisture and soil temperature and used high‐resolution measurements of soil moisture and soil temperature (hourly from May to October) to model N2 fixation. The modelled N2 fixation rates were highest in the warmed (2.8 ± 0.3 kg N ha?1) and birch litter addition plots (2.8 ± 0.2 kg N ha?1), and lowest in the plots receiving willow litter (1.6 ± 0.2 kg N ha?1). The control plots had intermediate rates (2.2 ± 0.2 kg N ha?1). Further, N2 fixation was highest during the summer in the warmed plots, but was lowest in the litter addition plots during the same period. The temperature and moisture dependence of N2 fixation was different between the climate change treatments, indicating a shift in the N2 fixer community. Our findings, using a combined empirical and modelling approach, suggest that a longer snow‐free period and increased temperatures in a future climate will likely lead to higher N2 fixation rates in mosses. Yet, the consequences of increased litter fall on moss‐associated N2 fixation due to shrub expansion in the Arctic will depend on the shrub species’ litter traits.  相似文献   

3.

Background and aims

The feather moss Pleurozium schreberi (Brid.) Mitt. is colonized by cyanobacteria, which fix substantial amounts of atmospheric nitrogen (N) in pristine and N-poor ecosystems. Cyanobacterial N2 fixation is inhibited by N deposition. However, the threshold of N input that leads to the inhibition of N2 fixation has not been adequately investigated. Further, the ability of N2 fixation to recover in mosses from high N deposition areas has not been studied to date.

Methods

We conducted two laboratory studies in which we (1) applied a range of concentrations of N as NH4NO3 to mosses from low N-deposition areas, and (2) we deprived mosses from a high N-deposition area of N to test their ability to recover N2 fixation.

Results

Higher addition rates (up to 10 kg N ha?1) did not systematically inhibit N2 fixation in P. schreberi. Conversely, upon weeks of N deprivation of mosses from a high N environment, N2 fixation rates increased.

Conclusions

The threshold of total N deposition above which N2 fixation in P. schreberi is inhibited is likely to be > 10 kg N ha?1. Further, cyanobacteria are able to recover from high N inputs and are able to fix atmospheric N2 after a period of N deprivation.  相似文献   

4.
Ledgard  S.F.  Sprosen  M.S.  Penno  J.W.  Rajendram  G.S. 《Plant and Soil》2001,229(2):177-187
Effects of rate of nitrogen (N) fertilizer and stocking rate on production and N2 fixation by white clover (Trifolium repens L.) grown with perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.) were determined over 5 years in farmlets near Hamilton, New Zealand. Three farmlets carried 3.3 dairy cows ha–1 and received urea at 0, 200 or 400 kg N ha–1 yr–1 in 8–10 split applications. A fourth farmlet received 400 kg N ha–1 yr–1 and had 4.4 cows ha–1.There was large variation in annual clover production and total N2 fixation, which in the 0 N treatment ranged from 9 to 20% clover content in pasture and from 79 to 212 kg N fixed ha–1 yr–1. Despite this variation, total pasture production in the 0 N treatment remained at 75–85% of that in the 400 N treatments in all years, due in part to the moderating effect of carry-over of fixed N between years.Fertilizer N application decreased the average proportion of clover N derived from N2 fixation (PN; estimated by 15N dilution) from 77% in the 0 N treatment to 43–48% in the 400 N treatments. The corresponding average total N2 fixation decreased from 154 kg N ha–1 yr–1 to 39–53 kg N ha–1 yr–1. This includes N2 fixation in clover tissue below grazing height estimated at 70% of N2 fixation in above grazing height tissue, based on associated measurements, and confirmed by field N balance calculations. Effects of N fertilizer on clover growth and N2 fixation were greatest in spring and summer. In autumn, the 200 N treatment grew more clover than the 0 N treatment and N2 fixation was the same. This was attributed to more severe grazing during summer in the 0 N treatment, resulting in higher surface soil temperatures and a deleterious effect on clover stolons.In the 400 N treatments, a 33% increase in cow stocking rate tended to decrease PN from 48 to 43% due to more N cycling in excreta, but resulted in up to 2-fold more clover dry matter and N2 fixation because lower pasture mass reduced grass competition, particularly during spring.  相似文献   

5.
Nitrogen deposition has decreased the plant-associated nitrogen (N2) fixation when measured using the indirect acetylene reduction assay (ARA). However, nitrogen deposition can also lead to changes in the diversity of moss symbionts, e.g. affect methanotrophic N2 fixation, which is not measured by ARA. To test this hypothesis we compared ARA with the direct stable isotope method (15N2 incorporation) and studied methanotrophy in two mosses, Hylocomium splendens and Pleurozium schreberi, collected from seven forest sites along a boreal latitudinal N deposition transect. We recognized that the two independent N2 fixation measures gave corresponding results with the conversion factor of 3.3, but the 15N2 method was more sensitive for finding a signal of low N2 fixation activity. Methane carbon fixation associated with mosses was under the detection limit (<2 nmol C g−1 h−1). N2 fixation rates were more pronounced in the mosses with higher C/N ratio, and in the green upper parts of the shoot than in the lower brownish parts. Sequencing of nifH genes revealed that dominating diazotrophs were affiliated to cyanobacterial genera Nostoc and Nodularia, but methanotrophic diazotrophs were not found in the nifH libraries. We conclude that the suppression of N2 fixation along the deposition gradient was consistent regardless of the measurement technique, and microbial community changes toward methanotrophic or otherwise acetylene-sensitive N2 fixation could not explain this trend.  相似文献   

6.
Productivity in boreal ecosystems is primarily limited by available soil nitrogen (N), and there is substantial interest in understanding whether deposition of anthropogenically derived reactive nitrogen (Nr) results in greater N availability to woody vegetation, which could result in greater carbon (C) sequestration. One factor that may limit the acquisition of Nr by woody plants is the presence of bryophytes, which are a significant C and N pool, and a location where associative cyanobacterial N‐fixation occurs. Using a replicated stand‐scale N‐addition experiment (five levels: 0, 3, 6, 12, and 50 kg N ha?1 yr?1; n=6) in the boreal zone of northern Sweden, we tested the hypothesis that sequestration of Nr into bryophyte tissues, and downregulation of N‐fixation would attenuate Nr inputs, and thereby limit anthropogenic Nr acquisition by woody plants. Our data showed that N‐fixation per unit moss mass and per unit area sharply decreased with increasing N addition. Additionally, the tissue N concentrations of Pleuorzium schreberi increased and its biomass decreased with increasing N addition. This response to increasing N addition caused the P. schreberi N pool to be stable at all but the highest N addition rate, where it significantly decreased. The combined effects of changed N‐fixation and P. schreberi biomass N accounted for 56.7% of cumulative Nr additions at the lowest Nr addition rate, but only a minor fraction for all other treatments. This ‘bryophyte effect’ can in part explain why soil inorganic N availability and acquisition by woody plants (indicated by their δ15N signatures) remained unchanged up to N addition rates of 12 kg ha?1 yr?1 or greater. Finally, we demonstrate that approximately 71.8% of the boreal forest experiences Nr deposition rates at or below 3 kg ha?1 yr?1, suggesting that bryophytes likely limit woody plant acquisition of ambient anthropogenic Nr inputs throughout a majority of the boreal forest.  相似文献   

7.
E. Medina 《Plant and Soil》1982,67(1-3):305-314
The nitrogen balance of a Trachypogon grassland in Calabozo, Venezuela, is calculated for average conditions using biomass accumulation, nitrogen content, and turnover rates of organic matter. Burning Trachypogon grasslands results in losses of 8.5 kg N ha?1 yr?1, while rainfall inputs average 2.6 kg N ha?1 yr?1. Uptake of N by vegetation is 14.8 kg N ha?1 yr?1, but the total N required to build new tissue during a growing season is about 30 kg N ha?1 yr?1, so that about 50% of the nitrogen in the vegetation is recycled internally. Nitrogen lossesvia fire are probably balanced by biological N2-fixation, but no data are available for N-fixation in these savannas. The calculations presented in this paper are based on few data and more measurements are needed to develop a conclusive picture of the N-balance of Trachypogon grasslands.  相似文献   

8.
Nitrogen loss from grassland on peat soils through nitrous oxide production   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Koops  J.G.  van Beusichem  M.L.  Oenema  O. 《Plant and Soil》1997,188(1):119-130
Nitrous oxide (N2O) in soils is produced through nitrification and denitrification. The N2O produced is considered as a nitrogen (N) loss because it will most likely escape from the soil to the atmosphere as N2O or N2. Aim of the study was to quantify N2O production in grassland on peat soils in relation to N input and to determine the relative contribution of nitrification and denitrification to N2O production. Measurements were carried out on a weekly basis in 2 grasslands on peat soil (Peat I and Peat II) for 2 years (1993 and 1994) using intact soil core incubations. In additional experiments distinction between N2O from nitrification and denitrification was made by use of the gaseous nitrification inhibitor methyl fluoride (CH3F).Nitrous oxide production over the 2 year period was on average 34 kg N ha-1 yr-1 for mown treatments that received no N fertiliser and 44 kg N ha-1 yr-1 for mown and N fertilised treatments. Grazing by dairy cattle on Peat I caused additional N2O production to reach 81 kg N ha-1 yr-1. The sub soil (20–40 cm) contributed 25 to 40% of the total N2O production in the 0–40 cm layer. The N2O production:denitrification ratio was on average about 1 in the top soil and 2 in the sub soil indicating that N2O production through nitrification was important. Experiments showed that when ratios were larger than l, nitrification was the major source of N2O. In conclusion, N2O production is a significant N loss mechanism in grassland on peat soil with nitrification as an important N2O producing process.  相似文献   

9.
J. P. Roskoski 《Plant and Soil》1982,67(1-3):283-291
Fertilizer studies in Mexico indicate that coffee production can be stimulated by added nitrogen. One traditional method of coffee cultivation employs leguminous trees for shade, but these species may also play an important role in coffee production by biologically fixing nitrogen. The presence and importance of nitrogen fixation was evaluated in four systems: coffee only, coffee plus the leguminous shade treeInga jinicuil Schletchter, coffee plus the leguminous treeInga vera H.B. and K., and coffee plus banana and orange trees. In all systems coffee leaves with epiphylls, wood litter, soil, roots, and root nodules were assayed for nitrogen fixing activity with the acetylene reduction technique. All components of these systems exhibited activity except roots. Total apparent fixation was highest in theInga jinicuil site, and equivalent to >40 kg N ha?1 yr?1 assuming a 3∶1 C2H2∶N2 ratio. The activity was primarily associated withInga jinicuil nodules. Apparent fixation in the other three sites was less than 1 kg N ha?1 yr?1. Nitrogen fixed in theI. jinicuil site was 53% of the average amount of fertilizer nitrogen applied annually, suggesting that fixation by non-crop legumes can be an important nitrogen source for coffee agro-ecosystems.  相似文献   

10.
E. Bornemisza 《Plant and Soil》1982,67(1-3):241-246
Nitrogen inputs to the coffee ecosystem are dominated by additions of fertilizer-N (100–300 kg N ha?1 yr?1). Small nitrogen inputs from rains and variable from inputs fixation by the leguminous shade trees can amount to 1–40 kg N ha?1 yr?1. Organic matter mineralization can be an important nitrogen source also. Nitrogen losses from the system include removal of N in the harvest (15–90 kg N ha?1 yr?1), the removal of coffee and shade tree prunings for firewood, losses from erosion, leaching losses and gaseous losses. Unfortunately, very little information exists for leaching and gaseous losses and for the factors that regulate these processes. The overall nitrogen cycle in shaded coffee plantings includes three interrelated subsystems. These are the coffee, shade and weeds subcycles.  相似文献   

11.

Background and Aims

Understanding the impact of soil rhizobial populations and inoculant rhizobia in supplying sufficient nodulation is crucial to optimising N2 fixation by legume crops. This study explored the impact of different rates of inoculant rhizobia and contrasting soil rhizobia on nodulation and N2 fixation in faba bean (Vicia faba L.).

Methods

Faba beans were inoculated with one of seven rates of rhizobial inoculation, from no inoculant to 100 times the normal rate of inoculation, sown at two field sites, with or without soil rhizobia present, and their nodulation and N2 fixation assessed.

Results

At the site without soil rhizobia, inoculation increased nodule number and increased N2 fixation from 21 to 129 kg shoot N ha?1, while N2 fixation increased from 132 to 218 kg shoot N ha?1 at the site with high background soil rhizobia. At the site without soil rhizobia, inoculation increased concentrations of shoot N from 14 to 24 mg g?1, grain N from 32 to 45 mg g?1, and grain yields by 1.0 Mg (metric tonne) ha?1. Differences in nodulation influenced the contributions of fixed N to the system, which varied from the net removal of 20 kg N ha?1 from the system in the absence of rhizobia, to a net maximum input of 199 kg N ha?1 from legume shoot and root residues, after accounting for removal of N in grain harvest.

Conclusions

The impact of inoculation and soil rhizobia strongly influenced grain yield, grain N concentration and the potential contributions of legume cropping to soil N fertility. In soil with resident rhizobia, N2 fixation was improved only with the highest inoculation rate.  相似文献   

12.
The pleurocarpus feather moss, Hylocomium splendens, is one of two co-dominant moss species in boreal forest ecosystems and one of the most common mosses on earth, yet little is known regarding its capacity to host cyanobacterial associates and thus contribute total ecosystem N. In these studies, we evaluated the N-fixation potential of the H. splendens–cyanobacteria association and contrasted the N-fixation activity with that of the putative N-fixing moss–cyanobacteria association of Pleurozium schreberi. Studies were conducted to: quantify N-fixation in H. splendens and P. schreberi in sites ranging from southern to northern Fennoscandia; assess N and P availability as drivers of N-fixation rates; contrast season-long N-fixation rates for both mosses; and characterize the cyanobacteria that colonize shoots of H. splendens. Nitrogen-fixation rates were generally low at southern latitudes and higher at northern latitudes (64–69°N) potentially related to anthropogenic N deposition across this gradient. Nitrogen fixation in H. splendens appeared to be less sensitive to N deposition than P. schreberi. The season-long assessment of N-fixation rates at a mixed feather moss site in northern Sweden showed that H. splendens fixed a substantial quantity of N, but about 50% less total N compared to the contribution from P. schreberi. In total, both species provided 1.6 kg fixed N ha−1 year−1. Interestingly, H. splendens demonstrated somewhat higher N-fixation rates at high fertility sites compared to P. schreberi. Nostoc spp. and Stigonema spp. were the primary cyanobacteria found to colonize H. splendens and P. schreberi. These results suggest that H. splendens with associated Nostoc or Stigonema communities contributes a significant quantity of N to boreal forest ecosystems, but the contribution is subordinate to that of P. schreberi at northern latitudes. Epiphytic cyanobacteria are likely a key factor determining the co-dominant presence of these two feather mosses across the boreal biome.  相似文献   

13.
Nitrogen fixation in groundnut and soyabean and the residual benefits of incoporated legume stover to subsequent rice crops were estimated in farmers' fields using15N-isotope methods. Three field experiments were conducted, two which examined N2-fixation in groundnut by15N-isotope dilution using a non-nodulating groundnut as a reference crop and one in which N2-fixation in two soyabean genotypes was compared using maize as the non-fixing reference crop. Groundnut fixed 72–77% of its N amounting to 150–200 kg N ha-1 in 106–119 days and soyabean derived 66–68% of its N from N2-fixation which amounted to 108–152 kg N ha-1 under similar conditions. When legume stover was returned to the soil, there was a net contribution of N from N2-fixing varieties of groundnut in all cases ranging from 13–100 kg N ha-1, whilst due to the high % N harvest index in soyabean (87–88%) there was a net removal of N of 37–46 kg N ha-1. In all cases if the legume stover was removed there was a net removal of N in the legume crop which ranged between 54 and 74 kg N ha-1 in N2-fixing varieties of groundnut and from 58 to 73 kg N ha-1 in soyabean, whilst maize removed 66 kg N ha-1 if its stover was returned and 101 kg N ha-1 when the stover was removed. Growth of rice was improved in all cases where groundnut stover was returned resulting in increases in grain yield of 12–26% and increases in total dry matter production of 26–31%. Soyabean residues gave no increases in rice grain yield but increased total dry matter production by 12–20%. Rice accumulated more N in all cases where legume stover was returned to the soil, and N yields were larger in all cases after the N2-fixing legumes than after the non-fixing reference crops. N difference estimates of the total residual N benefits from the N2-fixing legumes ranged from 11–19 kg N ha-1 after groundnut and 15–16 kg N ha-1 after soyabean. The amounts of N estimated directly by application of15N-labelled stover amounted to 7.2–20.5 kg N ha-1 with groundnut which represented recovery of 8–22% of the N added in the stover. In soyabean only 3.0–5.8 kg N ha-1 was estimated to be recovered by15N-labelling which was 15–23% of the added N, whilst only 1.3 kg N ha-1 (4% of the N added) was recovered by rice from the maize stover. An indirect15N-method based on addition of unlabelled stover to microplots where the soil had previously been labelled with15N gave extremely variable and often negative estimates of residual N benefits. Estimates of residual N from the added stover made by N difference calculations did not correspond with the estimates by direct15N-labelling in all cases and possible reasons for this are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
There is currently limited understanding of the contribution of biological N2 fixation (diazotrophy) to the N budget of large river systems. This natural source of N in boreal river systems may partially explain the sustained productivity of river floodplains in Northern Europe where winter fodder was harvested for centuries without fertilizer amendments. In much of the world, anthropogenic pollution and river regulation have nearly eliminated opportunities to study natural processes that shaped early nutrient dynamics of large river systems; however, pristine conditions in northern Fennoscandia allow for the retrospective evaluation of key biochemical processes of historical significance. We investigated biological N2 fixation (diazotrophy) as a potential source of nitrogen fertility at 71 independent floodplain sites along 10 rivers and conducted seasonal and intensive analyses at a subset of these sites. Biological N2 fixation occurred in all floodplains, averaged 24.5 kg N ha−1 yr−1 and was down regulated from over 60 kg N ha−1 yr−1 to 0 kg N ha−1 yr−1 by river N pollution. A diversity of N2-fixing cyanobacteria was found to colonize surface detritus in the floodplains. The data provide evidence for N2 fixation to be a fundamental source of new N that may have sustained fertility at alluvial sites along subarctic rivers. Such data may have implications for the interpretation of ancient agricultural development and the design of contemporary low-input agroecosystems.  相似文献   

15.
In order to better understand the relative importance of different ecosystems and nitrogen cycling processes within the Amazon basin to the nitrogen economy of this region, we constructed a generalized nitrogen budget for the region based on data for hydrologic losses of nitrogen and nitrogen fixation in Amazon forests. Data included information available for nitrogen in water entering and leaving both the entire basin and watersheds on oxisol and ultisol soils near Manaus, Brazil, in addition to biological nitrogen fixation in forests on ultisol, oxisol and entisol (‘varzea’) soils in Central Amazonia. Available data indicate that 4–6 kg N ha?1 yr?1 are lost via the River Amazonas, and that a similar amount enters in rainfall. Root-associated biological nitrogen fixation contributesca. 2 kg N ha?1 yr?1 to forests on oxisols, 20 kg N ha?1 yr?1 to forests on utisols, and 200 kg N ha?1 yr?1 to forests on fertile varzea soils. There is 5–10 fold more NH4 +?N than NO3?N in rain and stream water entering and leaving the waterbasin near Manaus. Calculations based on these data plus certain assumption yield the following regional nitrogen balance estimate: inputs through bulk deposition of 36×108 kg N yr?1 and through biological nitrogen fixation of 120×108 kg N yr?1, and outputsvia the River Amazonas of 36×108 kg N yr?1 andvia denitrification and volatization (by difference) of 120×108 kg N yr?1.  相似文献   

16.
Nitrogen (N) fixation is the main source of ‘new’ N for N-limited ecosystems like subarctic and arctic tundra. This crucial ecosystem function is performed by a wide range of N2 fixer (diazotroph) associations that could differ fundamentally in their timing and amount of N release to the soil. To assess the importance of different associative N2 fixers for ecosystem N cycling, we tracked 15N-N2 into four N2-fixer associations (with a legume, lichen, free-living, moss) and into soil, microbial biomass and non-diazotroph-associated plants 3 days and 5 weeks after in situ labelling. In addition, we tracked 13C from 13CO2 labelling to assess if N and C fixation are linked. Three days after labelling, half of the fixed 15N was recovered in the legume soils, indicating a fast release of fixed N2. Within 5 weeks, the free-living N2 fixers released two-thirds of the fixed 15N into the soil, whereas the lichen and moss retained the fixed 15N. Carbon and N2 fixation were linked in the lichen shortly after labelling, in free-living N2 fixers 5 weeks after labelling, and in the moss at both sampling times. The four investigated N2-fixer associations released fixed N2 at different rates into the soil, and non-diazotroph-associated plants have no access to ‘new’ N within several weeks after N2 fixation. Although legumes and free-living N2 fixers are immediate sources of ‘new’ N for N-limited tundra ecosystems, lichens and especially mosses, do not contribute to increase the N pool via N2 fixation in the short term.  相似文献   

17.
Short-rotation energy forestry is one of the potential ways for management of abandoned agricultural areas. It helps sequestrate carbon and mitigate human-induced climate changes. Owing to symbiotic dinitrogen (N2) fixation by actinomycetes and the soil fertilizing capacity and fast biomass growth of grey alders, the latter can be suitable species for short-rotation forestry. In our study of a young grey alder stand (Alnus incana (L.) Moench) on abandoned arable land in Estonia we tested the following hypotheses: (1) afforestation of abandoned agricultural land by grey alder significantly affects the soil nitrogen (N) status already during the first rotation period; (2) input of symbiotic fixation covers an essential part of the plant annual N demand of the stand; (3) despite a considerable N input into the ecosystem of a young alder stand, there will occur no significant environmental hazards (N leaching or N2O emissions). The first two hypotheses can be accepted: there was a significant increase in N and C content in the topsoil (from 0.11 to 0.14%, and from 1.4 to 1.7%, respectively), and N fixation (151.5 kg N ha−1 yr−1) covered about 74% of the annual N demand of the stand. The third hypothesis met support as well: N2O emissions (0.5 kg N ha−1 yr−1) were low, while most of the annual gaseous N losses were in the form of N2 (73.8 kg N ha−1 yr−1). Annual average NO3-N leaching was 15 kg N ha−1 yr−1 but the N that leached from topsoil accumulated in deeper soil layers. The soil acidifying effect of alders was clearly evident; during the 14-year period soil acidity increased 1.3 units in the upper 0-10 cm topsoil layer.  相似文献   

18.
Nitrogen (N) fixation in the feather moss–cyanobacteria association represents a major N source in boreal forests which experience low levels of N deposition; however, little is known about the effects of anthropogenic N inputs on the rate of fixation of atmospheric N2 in mosses and the succeeding effects on soil nutrient concentrations and microbial community composition. We collected soil samples and moss shoots of Pleurozium schreberi at six distances along busy and remote roads in northern Sweden to assess the influence of road-derived N inputs on N2 fixation in moss, soil nutrient concentrations and microbial communities. Soil nutrients were similar between busy and remote roads; N2 fixation was higher in mosses along the remote roads than along the busy roads and increased with increasing distance from busy roads up to rates of N2 fixation similar to remote roads. Throughfall N was higher in sites adjacent to the busy roads but showed no distance effect. Soil microbial phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) composition exhibited a weak pattern regarding road type. Concentrations of bacterial and total PLFAs decreased with increasing distance from busy roads, whereas fungal PLFAs showed no distance effect. Our results show that N2 fixation in feather mosses is highly affected by N deposition, here derived from roads in northern Sweden. Moreover, as other measured factors showed only weak differences between the road types, atmospheric N2 fixation in feather mosses represents a highly sensitive indicator for increased N loads to natural systems.  相似文献   

19.
Within a long-term research project studying the biogeochemical budget of an oak-beech forest ecosystem in the eastern part of the Netherlands, the nitrogen transformations and solute fluxes were determined in order to trace the fate of atmospherically deposited NH4 + and to determine the contribution of nitrogen transformations to soil acidification.The oak-beech forest studied received an annual input of nitrogen via throughfall and stemflow of 45 kg N ha–1 yr–1, mainly as NH4 +, whereas 8 kg N ha–1 yr–1 was taken up by the canopy. Due to the specific hydrological regime resulting in periodically occurring high groundwater levels, denitrification was found to be the dominant output flux (35 kg N ha–1 yr–1). N20 emmission rate measurements indicated that 57% of this gaseous nitrogen loss (20 kg N ha–1 yr–1) was as N2O. The forest lost an annual amount of 11 kg N ha–1 yr–1 via streamwater output, mainly as N03 .Despite the acid conditions, high nitrification rates were measured. Nitrification occurred mainly in the litter layer and in the organic rich part of the mineral soil and was found to be closely correlated with soil temperature. The large amount of NH4 + deposited on the forest floor via atmospheric deposition and produced by mineralization was to a large extent nitrified in the litter layer. Almost no NH4 + reached the subsurface soil horizons. The N03 was retained, taken up or transformed mainly in the mineral soil. A small amount of N03 (9 kg N ha–1 yr–1) was removed from the system in streamwater output. A relatively small amount of nitrogen was measured in the soil water as Dissolved Organic Nitrogen.On the basis of these data the proton budget of the system was calculated using two different approaches. In both cases net proton production rates were high in the vegetation and in the litter layer of the forest ecosystem. Nitrogen transformations induced a net proton production rate of 2.4 kmol ha–1 yr–1 in the soil compartment.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Yearly rates of nitrogen fixation associated with seven species of grass were measured on two artificially-established prairies. The C2H2 reduction method was used to measure the activity of soil cores taken within the stands of grass. Nitrogenase activity was specifically associated with Panicum virgatum and Sporobolus heterolepis, which had activities estimated at 3.6 and 2.9 kg N ha-1 yr-1. Fixation in stands of the other grasses ranged between 0.2 and 1.8 kg N ha-1 yr-1; free-living organisms might have fixed the N2 without specific association with the grasses, which were Andropogon gerardi, Andropogon scoparius, Spartina pectinata, Stipa spartea, and Poa pratensis. Three relic prairies were also examined, but the rates of fixation were no higher, except for S. heterolepis, which at one relic prairie had rates that extrapolated to 9 kg N ha-1 yr-1. The choices made for core location, size, depth, length of C2H2 incubation, and the time of day of sampling did not appear to have a substantial effect on the accuracy of the measurements. The organisms associated with S. heterolepis required O2 for N2 fixation, and they were located in the soil or on the smaller roots which remained when the major roots were removed from the soil. re]19750217  相似文献   

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