Base-cation Cycling by Individual Tree Species in Old-growth Forests of Upper Michigan,USA |
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Authors: | Ryo Fujinuma James Bockheim Nick Balster |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Soil Science, University of Wisconsin, 1525 Observatory Drive, Madison, WI 53706-1299, USA |
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Abstract: | The influence of individual tree species on base-cation (Ca, Mg, K, Na) distribution and cycling was examined in sugar maple
(Acer saccharum Marsh.), basswood (Tilia americana L.), and hemlock (Tsuga canadensis L.) in old-growth northern hardwood – hemlock forests on a sandy, mixed, frigid, Typic Haplorthod over two growing seasons
in northwestern Michigan. Base cations in biomass, forest floor, and mineral soil (0–15 cm and 15–40 cm) pools were estimated
for five replicated trees of each species; measured fluxes included bulk precipitation, throughfall, stemflow, litterfall,
forest-floor leachate, mineralization + weathering, shallow-soil leachate, and deep-soil leachate. The three species differed
in where base cations had accumulated within the single-tree ecosystems. Within these three single-tree ecosystems, the greatest
quantity of base cations in woody biomass was found in sugar maple, whereas hemlock and basswood displayed the greatest amount
in the upper 40 cm of mineral soil. Base-cation pools were ranked: sugar maple > basswood, hemlock in woody biomass; sugar
maple, basswood > hemlock in foliage; hemlock > sugar maple, basswood in the forest floor, and basswood > sugar maple, hemlock
in the mineral soil. Base-cation fluxes in throughfall, stemflow, the forest-floor leachate, and the deep-soil leachate (2000
only) were ranked: basswood > sugar maple > hemlock. Our measurements suggest that species-related differences in nutrient
cycling are sufficient to produce significant differences in base-cation contents of the soil over short time intervals (<65 years).
Moreover, these species-mediated differences may be important controls over the spatial pattern and edaphic processes of northern
hardwood-hemlock ecosystems in the upper Great Lakes region. |
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Keywords: | Acer saccharum Calcium Forest soils Nutrient cycling Old-growth forests Podzols Soil properties Species effects Tilia americana Tree species Tsuga canadensis |
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