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Large losses of inorganic nitrogen from tropical rainforests suggest a lack of nitrogen limitation
Authors:Brookshire E N J  Gerber Stefan  Menge Duncan N L  Hedin Lars O
Institution:Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544, USA. jbrookshire@montana.edu
Abstract:Inorganic nitrogen losses from many unpolluted mature tropical forests are over an order of magnitude higher than losses from analogous temperate forests. This pattern could either reflect a lack of N limitation or accelerated plant-soil N cycling under tropical temperatures and moisture. We used a simple analytical framework of the N cycle and compared our predictions with data of N in stream waters of temperate and tropical rainforests. While the pattern could be explained by differences in N limitation, it could not be explained based on up-regulation of the internal N cycle without invoking the unlikely assumption that tropical plants are two to four times less efficient at taking up N than temperate plants. Our results contrast with the idea that a tropical climate promotes and sustains an up-regulated and leaky - but N-limited - internal N cycle. Instead, they are consistent with the notion that many tropical rainforests exist in a state of N saturation.
Keywords:Analytical model  biogeochemical theory  biogeochemistry  climate  nitrogen (N) limitation and cycling  N losses  N saturation  plant–soil cycle  temperate rainforest  tropical rainforest
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