Natural 15N abundance of vegetation and soil in the Kapalga savanna,Australia |
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Authors: | PATRICK MORDELET,GARRY COOK,LUC ABBADIE,MICHELINE GRABLY,ANDR MARIOTTP |
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Affiliation: | PATRICK MORDELET,GARRY COOK,LUC ABBADIE,MICHELINE GRABLY,ANDRÉ MARIOTTP |
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Abstract: | Abstract The natural abundance of the stable isotope 15N was measured in different vegetation components and in the soil of a northern Australian savanna. Most of the vegetation was found to be 15N-depleted compared to atmospheric N2. Herbaceous legumes, perennial grasses, tree legumes, non-legume trees and annual grasses exhibited mean δ15N of ? 1.7, ? 0.8, ? 0.7, 0.0 and + 0.3‰, respectively. These results are in good agreement with previous studies. Legumes exhibit slightly negative values, indicating that they are likely to be nitrogen-fixing plants. Non-legume plants have a δ15N close to zero, which could equally result from non-symbiotic fixation, soil organic matter mineralization, or fresh root litter mineralization. In contrast, soil organic matter was 15N-enriched. Values of δ15N increased with depth and were + 2.5, + 5.2 and +6.1‰ in the 0–10, 10–20 and 20–40cm layers, respectively. Soil organic matter δ15N shows a typical profile of mature soils. |
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Keywords: | nitrogen cycle northern Australia stable isotopes |
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