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Ammonia volatilization from a seasonally and spatially variable grazed grassland: Yellowstone National Park
Authors:DOUGLAS A. FRANK  YIMIN ZHANG
Affiliation:(1) Biological Research Labs, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY 13244-1220, USA
Abstract:We measured ammonia volatilization at three topographic positions(hilltop, mid-slope, slope-bottom) on three grassland landscapes at threetimes during 1995 (April, May, July) on the northern winter range ofYellowstone National Park that supports large herds of native ungulates.Percent ammonia-N lost from all sites during the study ranged 1–24%of urea-N applied. Volatilization among sites was negatively related tosoil cation-exchange capacity (r = –0.85) and rates were highest inJuly. We used the relationship between soil CEC and percent Nvolatilized from urea-amended plots to estimate annual ammonia-Nvolatilization from 5 sites for which annual ungulate urine inputs werepreviously determined (Frank et al. 1994). Estimated mean annualammonia-N volatilized from those sites was 1.4 kg/ha/yr, which wasless than a previously reported regional atmospheric deposition rate (2kg/ha/yr; Swank 1984). Results indicate the need to understand theinteraction between (1) spatially heterogeneous patterns of soilprocesses, and 2) nonuniform patterns of ungulate use of landscapes todetermine rates of ecosystem-level N-gaseous loss. Findings alsosuggest that ammonia-N volatilized from urine patches should not leadto a decline in soil N in this ecosystem.
Keywords:ammonia volatilization  grassland  nitrogen  ungulate  Yellowstone National Park
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