252-5 Belowground Processes Regulate Ecosystem Nitrogen Retention During a Multi-Year Forest Dieback Event.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Forest, Range & Wildland Soils
See more from this Session: Symposium--Soil Mechanisms Controlling Forest Responses to Management and Environmental Change: 2

Tuesday, November 5, 2013: 10:10 AM
Tampa Convention Center, Room 5

Lucas E. Nave, University of Michigan Biological Station, Pellston, MI, Knute Nadelhoffer, 830 N. University Avenue, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, Jim Le Moine, Biological Station, University of Michigan, Pellston, MI and Chris Gough, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA
Abstract:
In the absence of disturbances, forests typically have strong retention capacity for nitrogen (N), which is internally recycled between soil, microbial and plant pools. However, disturbances that trigger senescence or mortality of forest vegetation may alter internal N cycling processes and lead to the loss of ecosystem N retention capacity. Here, we present an assessment of the role played by belowground processes in governing ecosystem N cycling and retention during an experimental disturbance that killed the dominant canopy taxa in a Great Lakes forest over a 4-year period. After applying stem girdling to hasten the age-related senescence of the dominant taxa (Populus and Betula spp.; ~35% of the basal area), we observed a 38% decrease in stand-level allocation of nonstructural carbohydrates to fine roots, which triggered a tenfold increase in the rate of fine root turnover and increased soil NH4+ and NO3- availability. Elevated soil N availability decreased mycorrhizal hyphal foraging and N uptake, effectively down-regulating the role of symbiotic fungi in the N nutrition of the residual (longer-lived) tree taxa. However, even as residual trees took up less N from mycorrhizal sources, their overall N uptake increased and served to offset the loss of the dominant taxa. The net result of this offset was that canopy N stocks remained constant through the disturbance period and there was no appreciable loss of ecosystem N stocks due to leaching or gaseous export. In sum, the cascade of changes in root, microbial, and soil processes during this experiment indicates that these interdependent components of the belowground system comprised a mechanism responsible for retention and redistribution of ecosystem N stocks during the disturbance period.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Forest, Range & Wildland Soils
See more from this Session: Symposium--Soil Mechanisms Controlling Forest Responses to Management and Environmental Change: 2