Response of nitrogen cycling to simulated climate change: differential responses along a subalpine ecotone
- 1 February 2001
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Global Change Biology
- Vol. 7 (2) , 193-210
- https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2486.2001.00390.x
Abstract
Summary: In situnitrogen (N) transformations and N availability were examined over a four‐year period in two soil microclimates (xeric and mesic) under a climate‐warming treatment in a subalpine meadow/sagebrush scrub ecotone. Experimental plots that spanned the two soil microclimates were exposed to anin situinfrared (IR) climate change manipulation at the Rocky Mountain Biological Laboratory, near Crested Butte, Colorado. Although the two microclimates did not differ significantly in their rates of N transformations in the absence of heating, they differed significantly in their response to increased IR. Under a simulated warming in the sagebrush‐dominated xeric microclimate, gross N mineralization rates doubled and immobilization rates increased by up to 60% over the first 2 years of the study but declined to predisturbance rates by the fourth year. This temporal pattern of gross mineralization rates correlated with a decline in SOM. Concurrently, rates of net mineralization rates in the heated plots were 60% higher than the controls after the first year. There were no differences in gross or net nitrification rates with heating in the xeric soils. In contrast to the xeric microclimate, there were no significant effects of heating on any N transformation rates in the mesic microclimate. The differing responses in N cycling rates of the two microclimate to the increased IR is most certainly the result of differences in initial soil moisture conditions and vegetation type and cover.Keywords
This publication has 68 references indexed in Scilit:
- Winter production of COOecologia, 1997
- Responses of Plant Litter Decomposition and Nitrogen Mineralisation to Simulated Environmental Change in a High Arctic Polar Semi-Desert and a Subarctic Dwarf Shrub HeathOikos, 1995
- Responses of Arctic Tundra to Experimental and Observed Changes in ClimateEcology, 1995
- Climatic, edaphic, and biotic controls over storage and turnover of carbon in soilsGlobal Biogeochemical Cycles, 1994
- Long‐Term Response of an Arctic Sedge to Climate Change: A Simulation StudyEcological Applications, 1992
- Responses of Terrestrial Ecosystems to the Changing Atmosphere: A Resource-Based ApproachAnnual Review of Ecology and Systematics, 1992
- Surface Energy Budgets over Alpine Tundra in Summer, Niwot Ridge, Colorado Front RangeMountain Research and Development, 1991
- Soil‐plant element relationships in a tundra ecosystemEcography, 1989
- A proposed use of ion exchange resins to measure nitrogen mineralization and nitrification in intact soil coresCommunications in Soil Science and Plant Analysis, 1986
- A Preliminary Assessment of the Geomorphic Role of Pocket Gophers in the Alpine Zone of the Colorado Front RangeGeografiska Annaler: Series A, Physical Geography, 1978