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Calcium oxalate contribution to calcium cycling in forests of contrasting nutrient status

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Title Calcium oxalate contribution to calcium cycling in forests of contrasting nutrient status
Names Dauer, Jenny M. (creator)
Perakis, Steven S. (creator)
Date Issued 2014-12-15 (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 Elsevier and can be found at: http://www.journals.elsevier.com/forest-ecology-and-management.
Abstract Calcium oxalate (Ca oxalate) is an insoluble biomineral that forms in plants and fungi, and occurs in soils
across many types of ecosystems. Assessing how Ca oxalate may shape ecosystem Ca cycling requires
information on the distribution of Ca oxalate among plant biomass, detritus, and mineral soil, and how
it varies with ecosystem Ca status. We compared two Douglas-fir forests of contrasting ecosystem Ca
availability, and found that Ca oxalate was partitioned similarly among plant biomass, detritus and mineral
soil major ecosystem compartments at both sites, and total pools of Ca oxalate were greater in the
high-Ca forest. However, the proportional importance of Ca oxalate was greater in the low-Ca than
high-Ca forest (18% versus 4% of actively cycling ecosystem Ca, respectively). And calcium oxalate in mineral
soil, which is of particular interest as a potential long-term Ca reservoir, was a larger portion of total
available Ca (exchangeable Ca plus Ca oxalate Ca) in the low-Ca site than the high-Ca site (9% versus 1% of
available soil Ca, respectively). Calcium oxalate was the dominant form of Ca returned from plants to soil
as leaf litterfall at the high-Ca site, yet calcium oxalate disappeared rapidly from decomposing litter
(0.28 yr⁻¹ or faster) at both sites. We conclude that accumulation of Ca oxalate in forest ecosystems
appears most closely related to overall Ca supply for live biomass pools, and that the accumulation of
Ca oxalate in forest floor and mineral soil is limited by rapid microbial degradation of putatively unavailable
Ca oxalate.
Genre Article
Topic Calcium cycling
Identifier Dauer, J. M., & Perakis, S. S. (2014). Calcium oxalate contribution to calcium cycling in forests of contrasting nutrient status. Forest Ecology and Management, 334, 64-73. doi:10.1016/j.foreco.2014.08.029

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