Literature DB >> 26236837

Organic forms dominate hydrologic nitrogen export from a lowland tropical watershed.

Philip G Taylor, William R Wieder, Samantha Weintraub, Sagy Cohen, Cory C Cleveland, Alan R Townsend.   

Abstract

Observations of high dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) concentrations in stream water have reinforced the notion that primary tropical rain forests cycle nitrogen (N) in relative excess compared to phosphorus. Here we test this notion by evaluating hydrologic N export from a small watershed on the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica, where prior research has shown multiple indicators of conservative N cycling throughout the ecosystem. We repeatedly measured a host of factors known to influence N export for one year, including stream water chemistry and upslope litterfall, soil N availability and net N processing rates, and soil solution chemistry at the surface, 15- and 50-cm depths. Contrary to prevailing assumptions about the lowland N cycle, we find that dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) averaged 85% of dissolved N export for 48 of 52 consecutive weeks. For most of the year stream water nitrate (NO3-) export was very low, which reflected minimal net N processing and DIN leaching from upslope soils. Yet, for one month in the dry season, NO3- was the major component of N export due to a combination of low flows and upslope nitrification that concentrated NO3- in stream water. Particulate organic N (PON) export was much larger than dissolved forms at 14.6 kg N x ha(-1) x yr(-1), driven by soil erosion during storms. At this rate, PON export was slightly greater than estimated inputs from free-living N fixation and atmospheric N deposition, which suggests that erosion-driven PON export could constrain ecosystem level N stocks over longer timescales. This phenomenon is complimentary to the "DON leak" hypothesis, which postulates that the long-term accumulation of ecosystem N in unpolluted ecosystems is constrained by the export of organic N independently of biological N demand. Using an established global sediment generation model, we illustrate that PON erosion may be an important vector for N loss in tropical landscapes that are geomorphically active. This study supports an emerging view that landscape geomorphology influences nutrient biogeochemistry and limitation, though more research is needed to understand the mechanisms and spatial significance of erosional N loss from terrestrial ecosystems.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26236837     DOI: 10.1890/13-1418.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ecology        ISSN: 0012-9658            Impact factor:   5.499


  4 in total

1.  Landscape-Scale Controls on Aboveground Forest Carbon Stocks on the Osa Peninsula, Costa Rica.

Authors:  Philip Taylor; Gregory Asner; Kyla Dahlin; Christopher Anderson; David Knapp; Roberta Martin; Joseph Mascaro; Robin Chazdon; Rebecca Cole; Wolfgang Wanek; Florian Hofhansl; Edgar Malavassi; Braulio Vilchez-Alvarado; Alan Townsend
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-06-10       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Modeling geogenic and atmospheric nitrogen through the East River Watershed, Colorado Rocky Mountains.

Authors:  Taylor Maavara; Erica R Siirila-Woodburn; Fadji Maina; Reed M Maxwell; James E Sample; K Dana Chadwick; Rosemary Carroll; Michelle E Newcomer; Wenming Dong; Kenneth H Williams; Carl I Steefel; Nicholas J Bouskill
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-03-24       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Extreme rainstorms drive exceptional organic carbon export from forested humid-tropical rivers in Puerto Rico.

Authors:  K E Clark; R F Stallard; S F Murphy; M A Scholl; G González; A F Plante; W H McDowell
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-04-19       Impact factor: 17.694

4.  In-depth analysis of N2O fluxes in tropical forest soils of the Congo Basin combining isotope and functional gene analysis.

Authors:  Nora Gallarotti; Matti Barthel; Elizabeth Verhoeven; Engil Isadora Pujol Pereira; Marijn Bauters; Simon Baumgartner; Travis W Drake; Pascal Boeckx; Joachim Mohn; Manon Longepierre; John Kalume Mugula; Isaac Ahanamungu Makelele; Landry Cizungu Ntaboba; Johan Six
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2021-05-25       Impact factor: 10.302

  4 in total

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