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Fate of ammonium 15N in a Norway spruce forest under long-term reduction in atmospheric N deposition
Authors:Nicole Dörr  Klaus Kaiser  Leopold Sauheitl  Norbert Lamersdorf  C. Florian Stange  Georg Guggenberger
Affiliation:1. Institute of Soil Science, Leibniz University Hannover, Herrenh?user Str. 2, 30419, Hannover, Germany
2. Soil Sciences, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg, von-Seckendoff-Platz 3, 06120, Halle (Saale), Germany
3. Soil Physics Department, University Bayreuth, 95440, Bayreuth, Germany
4. Soil Science of Temperate and Boreal Ecosystems, Büsgen-Institute, Georg August University of G?ttingen, Büsgenweg 2, 37077, G?ttingen, Germany
5. Bundesanstalt für Geowisschenschaften und Rohstoffe, Geozentrum Hannover, Stilleweg 2, 30655, Hannover, Germany
Abstract:In the last decades, in particular forest ecosystems became increasingly N saturated due to elevated atmospheric N deposition, resulting from anthropogenic N emission. This led to serious consequences for the environment such as N leaching to the groundwater. Recent efforts to reduce N emissions raise the question if, and over what timescale, ecosystems recover to previous conditions. In order to study the effects on N distribution and N transformation processes under the lowered N deposition treatment, we investigated the fate of deposited NH4 +-15N in soil of a N-saturated Norway spruce forest (current N deposition: 34 kg ha?1 year?1; critical N load: 14 kg ha?1 year?1), where N deposition has been reduced to 11.5 kg ha?1 year?1 since 14.5 years. We traced the deposited 15N in needle litter, bulk soil, and amino acids, microbial biomass and inorganic N in soil. Under reduced N deposition, 123 ± 23% of the deposited N was retained in bulk soil, while this was only 72 ± 15% under ambient deposition. We presume that with reduced deposition the amount of deposited N was small enough to become completely immobilized in plant and soil and no leaching losses occurred. Trees receiving reduced N deposition showed a decline in N content as well as in 15N incorporation into needle litter, indicating reduced N plant uptake. In contrast, the distribution of 15N within the soil over active microbial biomass, microbial residues and inorganic N was not affected by the reduced N deposition. We conclude that the reduction in N deposition impacted only plant uptake and drainage losses, while microbial N transformation processes were not influenced. We assume changes in the biological N turnover to start with the onset of the decomposition of the new, N-depleted litter.
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