/AnMtgsAbsts2009.53534 Is P More Limiting Than N in Young Northern Hardwood Forests?.

Monday, November 2, 2009
Convention Center, Exhibit Hall BC, Second Floor

Ruth Yanai1, Edward B. Rastetter2, Melany C. Fisk3, Tera J. Ratliff3, Timothy J. Fahey4, Brendan K. Naples5, Farrah Fatemi6 and Steven Hamburg7, (1)Forest and Natural Resources Management, SUNY, Environ. Sci. & Forestry, Syracuse, NY
(2)The Ecosystems Center, Marine Biological Lab., Woods Hole, MA
(3)Department of Zoology, Miami Univ., Oxford, OH
(4)Cornell Univ., Ithaca, NY
(5)Appalachian State Univ., Boone, NC
(6)Department of Plant, Soil and Environmental Sciences, Univ. of Maine, Orono, ME
(7)Environmental Defense Fund, Boston, MA
Abstract:
Although temperate forests have long been thought to be primarily nitrogen limited, resource optimization theory suggests that ecosystem productivity should be co-limited by multiple nutrients.  In northeastern North America, air pollution and forest harvesting disturbance elevate N availability and contribute to the likelihood of P limitation.  We extended the Multi-Element Limitation (MEL) model to include P, light, and water as well as N and carbon, and we applied it to simulate secondary succession in northern hardwood forests.  The model predicted a greater response of aboveground productivity to N+P than N or P alone.  In older stands, MEL predicted a greater response to N than to P addition, but in younger stands, the supply of N from detritus was predicted to be sufficient to create P limitation. To test for differences in N and P availability and acquisition as a function of forest age, we made field measurements in replicate young (26-30 years) and mature (>100 years) stands in the Bartlett Experimental Forest, New Hampshire.  Foliar retranslocation of P exceeded that of N in yellow birch and sugar maple, especially in young stands.  Phosphatase activity was higher in young forests than in mature forests, and fine roots foraged preferentially for P in young forests and for N in mature forests. Net N mineralization rates were higher in young than mature forests.  Resin-available P did not differ between young and mature forests, but lower bicarbonate-extractable P in young forests suggests transfer of organic P to available pools, consistent with the idea of higher P mobilization in young forests.  Microbial N:P ratios in the mineral soil in both old and young forests averaged 29:1, suggesting P limitation to microorganisms that may cause competition for P with plants.  These results indicate that P could now be more limiting than N especially in young stands.