An Unexpected Nitrate Decline in New Hampshire Streams |
| |
Authors: | Christine L. Goodale John D. Aber Peter M. Vitousek |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) Complex Systems Research Center, University of New Hampshire, Durham, New Hampshire 03824, USA, US;(2) Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305, USA, US |
| |
Abstract: | Theories of forest nitrogen (N) cycling suggest that stream N losses should increase in response to chronic elevated N deposition and as forest nutrient requirements decline with age. The latter theory was supported initially by measurements of stream NO3 − concentration in old-growth and successional stands on Mount Moosilauke, New Hampshire (Vitousek and Reiners 1975; Bioscience 25:376–381). We resampled 28 of these and related streams to evaluate their response to 23 years of forest aggradation and chronic N deposition. Between 1973–74 and 1996–97, mean NO3 − concentration in quarterly samples from Mount Moosilauke decreased by 71% (25 μmol/L), Ca2+ decreased by 24% (8 μmol/L), and Mg2+ decreased by 22% (5 μmol/L). Nitrate concentrations decreased in every stream in every season, but spatial patterns among streams persisted: Streams draining old-growth stands maintained higher NO3 − concentrations than those draining successional stands. The cause of the NO3 − decline is not evident. Nitrogen deposition has changed little, and although mechanisms such as insect defoliation and soil frost may contribute to the temporal patterns of nitrate loss, they do not appear to fully explain the NO3 − decline across the region. Although the role of climate remains uncertain, interannual climate variation and its effects on biotic N retention may be responsible for the synchronous decrease in NO3 − across all streams, overriding expected increases due to chronic N deposition and forest aging. Received 4 December 2001; accepted 30 May 2002. |
| |
Keywords: | : atmospheric deposition biogeochemical theory nitrate leaching nitrogen saturation nutrient retention old-growth forests succession. |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|