Asymbiotic nitrogen fixation in litter from Pacific Northwest forests

Abstract
Asymbiotic nitrogen fixation in litter was assayed by acetylene reduction across a range of 25 forested sites in the Willamette Valley and Oregon Cascade and Coast ranges and periodically over a year at two Douglas-fir (Pseudotsugamenziesii (Mirb.) Franco) plantations in the Willamette Valley. Laboratory experiments showed that optimal conditions for N fixation by Douglas-fir litter were 200% moisture content and 22 °C. Annual fixation was 1.08 ± 0.13 kg/ha at one Willamette Valley plantation, 0.39 ± 0.06 kg/ha at the other. Fixation rates at the other 23 sites, which were sampled less frequently, ranged from 0 to 5 g N ha−1 day−1 and exceeded trace levels at only six sites, indicating annual totals much less than those at the Willamette Valley plantations. At four coastal and valley sites sampled by litter layer, older L layer Douglas-fir litter fixed the most N per gram dry weight. Percent N, percent C, and the C:N ratio of that litter layer did not differ significantly among sites or correlate with N-fixation rates. Forest-floor litter in most Northwest forests fixes no more than trace amounts of N, at most ~1 kg N ha−1 year−1. These amounts are smaller than N input from precipitation.