Carbon and nitrogen transformations in New Zealand plantation forest soils from sites with different N status
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Forest Research
- Vol. 28 (7) , 967-976
- https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfr-28-7-967
Abstract
Interactions between soil nutrient cycling processes are likely to influence N losses following disturbance in forest ecosystems. During a 340-day laboratory incubation, we examined C and N transformations in three sandy soils of different N status from Pinus radiata D. Don plantations before clear-cutting. The soils were a high N status Andisol (losing -N in streamwater) and a fertilized and unfertilized Entisol. In contrast to other forest ecosystems, -N accumulated readily in all mineral soils and in the Andisol forest floor but did not accumulate until day 63 and 210 in the fertilized and unfertilized Entisol forest floor, respectively. However, gross nitrification occurred from day 42 in both Entisol treatments. Net nitrification in the Entisol forest floor began when substrate C/N ratio declined to about 40, possibly because of decreased C availability and decreased competition for both -N and -N in conjunction with a lower microbial C/N ratio. Carbon and gross N mineralization rates (per unit of C or N, respectively) correlated positively (r2 = 0.93) in mineral soil but correlated negatively in the forest floor, probably because of major differences in C and N quality and potential differences in microbial community structure. The mean residence time of N in mineral-N pools was higher for soils from the N-rich site, in part because of lower microbial N demand. These results suggest that sudden removal of C inputs (such as at harvest) may cause greater disruption of internal soil N cycles on nutrient poor sites, increasing the proportional losses of N as compared to nutrient-rich sites.Keywords
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