Nutrient limitation in
restored and natural reference wetlands of the Florida
Everglades
Xiaolin Liao,
Benjamin A. Hogue, Cassandra A. Medvedeff, Kanika S. Inglett, and Patrick W.
Inglett*.
Soil
and Water Science Department, University
of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA.
Abstract:
Limitation
of nitrogen (N) versus phosphorus (P) is a critical consideration in ecosystem
restoration, especially for calcareous wetlands like those of the Florida
Everglades. In this study, we measured soil biogeochemical properties (i.e.,
nutrient concentrations and ratios, enzyme activities) and periphyton
N2 fixation rates in wetland soils from a 6-year-old restored,
10-year-old-restored, and a native reference wetland in the wet (October, 2009)
and dry season (February, 2010) in the Florida Everglades. Soil biogeochemical
parameters (TP, TN:TP,
organic matter) were highly correlated with measured enzyme activities (phosphatase, N-acetyl glucosaminidase
-NAG and Leucine-aminopeptidase-LAP, and nitrogenase). A higher molar ratio of soil TN:TP was observed in reference site (49.4±6.2) relative to the 6 (6.6±0.2) and 10 year old (11.9±2.6)
restored sites, indicating P limitation in the reference site. Significantly
higher phosphatase activities was observed in
reference relative to restored soils in
the wet (P<0.001) and dry (P<0.005) seasons, suggesting
that microbes were limited in inorganic P. Enzymes involved in N cycling were 2
to 3 times higher in the 6 year old restored site relative to reference site,
suggesting that N limitation declines with the age of soils. In addition, the
areal N2 fixation of periphyton, was
significantly lower in the reference (0.07g N m-2 y-1)
relative to the two restored wetland sites (in the range from 0.1 to 0.3 g N m-2
y-1) (p<0.001), which further supported this result. The findings
of this study have important management implications for the restoration of
this and similar ecosystems.
Keywords: nitrogen limitation,
phosphorus limitation, wetland restoration, nitrogen fixation, enzymes