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Forest calcium depletion and biotic retention along a soil nitrogen gradient

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

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Title Forest calcium depletion and biotic retention along a soil nitrogen gradient
Names Perakis, Steven S. (creator)
Sinkhorn, Emily R. (creator)
Catricala, Christina E. (creator)
Bullen, Thomas D. (creator)
Fitzpatrick, John A. (creator)
Hynicka, Justin D. (creator)
Cromack, Kermit, Jr. (creator)
Date Issued 2013-12 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the Ecological Society of America and can be found at: http://www.esajournals.org/loi/ecap.
Abstract High nitrogen (N) accumulation in terrestrial ecosystems can shift patterns of
nutrient limitation and deficiency beyond N toward other nutrients, most notably phosphorus
(P) and base cations (calcium [Ca], magnesium [Mg], and potassium [K]). We examined how
naturally high N accumulation from a legacy of symbiotic N fixation shaped P and base cation
cycling across a gradient of nine temperate conifer forests in the Oregon Coast Range. We
were particularly interested in whether long-term legacies of symbiotic N fixation promoted
coupled N and organic P accumulation in soils, and whether biotic demands by non-fixing
vegetation could conserve ecosystem base cations as N accumulated. Total soil N (0–100 cm)
pools increased nearly threefold across the N gradient, leading to increased nitrate leaching,
declines in soil pH from 5.8 to 4.2, 10-fold declines in soil exchangeable Ca, Mg, and K, and
increased mobilization of aluminum. These results suggest that long-term N enrichment had
acidified soils and depleted much of the readily weatherable base cation pool. Soil organic P
increased with both soil N and C across the gradient, but soil inorganic P, biomass P, and P
leaching loss did not vary with N, implying that historic symbiotic N fixation promoted soil
organic P accumulation and P sufficiency for non-fixers. Even though soil pools of Ca, Mg,
and K all declined as soil N increased, only Ca declined in biomass pools, suggesting the
emergence of Ca deficiency at high N. Biotic conservation and tight recycling of Ca increased
in response to whole-ecosystem Ca depletion, as indicated by preferential accumulation of Ca
in biomass and surface soil. Our findings support a hierarchical model of coupled N–Ca
cycling under long-term soil N enrichment, whereby ecosystem-level N saturation and nitrate
leaching deplete readily available soil Ca, stimulating biotic Ca conservation as overall supply
diminishes. We conclude that a legacy of biological N fixation can increase N and P
accumulation in soil organic matter to the point that neither nutrient is limiting to subsequent
non-fixers, while also resulting in natural N saturation that intensifies base cation depletion
and deficiency.
Genre Article
Topic Aluminum
Identifier Steven S. Perakis, Emily R. Sinkhorn, Christina E. Catricala, Thomas D. Bullen, John A. Fitzpatrick, Justin D. Hynicka, and Kermit Cromack, Jr. 2013. Forest calcium depletion and biotic retention along a soil nitrogen gradient. Ecological Applications 23:1947–1961. doi:10.1890/12-2204.1

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