Within‐site difference in nitrogen status between mixed forests and larch plantations: Evidence from multiple indicators

Author:

Gurmesa Geshere Abdisa1ORCID,Zhang Shasha2,Wang Ang134ORCID,Zhu Feifei134ORCID,Mgelwa Abubakari Said15ORCID,Wang Chuankuan6ORCID,Zhang Qiuliang7,Zhu Weixing8ORCID,Fang Yunting134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CAS Key Laboratory of Forest Ecology and Management Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Shenyang China

2. Division of Terrestrial Ecosystem Research, Department of Microbiology and Ecosystem Science University of Vienna Vienna Austria

3. Qingyuan Forest Chinese Ecosystem Research Network (Qingyuan Forest CERN) Chinese Academy of Sciences Shenyang China

4. Key Laboratory of Stable Isotope Technique Shenyang China

5. College of Natural Resources Management & Tourism Mwalimu Julius K. Nyerere University of Agriculture & Technology Musoma Tanzania

6. College of Forestry Northeast Forestry University Harbin China

7. Forestry College Inner Mongolia Agricultural University Hohhot China

8. Department of Biological Sciences Binghamton University, The State University of New York Binghamton New York USA

Abstract

AbstractConversion of natural and secondary mixed forests to plantation monocultures can alter soil physical, chemical, and biological properties, which may lead to changes in ecosystem nitrogen (N) status by altering soil N availability. However, assessing and comparing N status between forest types within and across sites remain challenging because different indicators often yield contradicting conclusions. We developed a multiple‐indicator approach to evaluate N status across sites and between larch monocultures and mixed secondary forests paired at three sites (Daxinganling, Maoershan, and Qingyuan) in northeastern China. The selected indicators were foliar N content (%N), soil carbon‐to‐N ratio (C/N), soil inorganic N, foliar 15N natural abundance (δ15N), and δ15N of bulk soil, ammonium, and nitrate in the soil profiles. Our results, as shown mainly by C/N of soil organic layer and the fraction of nitrate in soil inorganic N, showed that N availability increased from north to south in the order Daxinganling < Maoershan < Qingyuan, along with the increasing climatic (mean annual temperature and mean annual precipitation) and N deposition gradients. We also found that the mixed forests had lower N availability than the larch plantations at the two north sites (Daxinganling and Maoershan), while the opposite was found in the south site (Qingyuan). The site‐specific pattern of N availability in the larch versus mixed stands reflects the difference in their succession and management histories. Our study demonstrated that a multiple‐indicator approach is needed for a comprehensive comparison of the N status of different forest types both within and across sites.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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