Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Sinks for nitrogen inputs in terrestrial ecosystems: a meta-analysis of 15N tracer field studies
Author
Templer, P H
Mack, M C
Chapin, III F S
Christenson, L M
Compton, J E
Crook, H D
Currie, W S
Curtis, C J
Dail, D B
D'Antonio, C M
Emmett, B A
Epstein, H E
Goodale, C L
Gundersen, P
Hobbie, S E
Holland, K
Hooper, D U
Hungate, B A
Lamontagne, S
Nadelhoffer, K J
Osenberg, C W
Perakis, S S
Schleppi, P
Schimel, J
Schmidt, I K
Sommerkorn, M
Spoelstra, J
Tietema, A
Wessel, W W
Zak, D R
Publisher
Ecology
Publication Year
2012
Body

Effects of anthropogenic nitrogen (N) deposition and the ability of terrestrial ecosystems to store carbon (C) depend in part on the amount of N retained in the system and its partitioning among plant and soil pools. We conducted a meta-analysis of studies at 48 sites across four continents that used enriched 15N isotope tracers in order to synthesize information about total ecosystem N retention (i.e., total ecosystem 15N recovery in plant and soil pools) across natural systems and N partitioning among ecosystem pools. The greatest recoveries of ecosystem 15N tracer occurred in shrublands (mean, 89.5%) and wetlands (84.8%) followed by forests (74.9%) and grasslands (51.8%). In the short term (<1 week after 15N tracer application), total ecosystem 15N recovery was negatively correlated with fine-root and soil 15N natural abundance, and organic soil C and N concentration but was positively correlated with mean annual temperature and mineral soil C:N. In the longer term (3–18 months after 15N tracer application), total ecosystem 15N retention was negatively correlated with foliar natural-abundance 15N but was positively correlated with mineral soil C and N concentration and C?:?N, showing that plant and soil natural-abundance 15N and soil C:N are good indicators of total ecosystem N retention. Foliar N concentration was not significantly related to ecosystem 15N tracer recovery, suggesting that plant N status is not a good predictor of total ecosystem N retention. Because the largest ecosystem sinks for 15N tracer were below ground in forests, shrublands, and grasslands, we conclude that growth enhancement and potential for increased C storage in aboveground biomass from atmospheric N deposition is likely to be modest in these ecosystems. Total ecosystem 15N recovery decreased with N fertilization, with an apparent threshold fertilization rate of 46 kg N·ha?1·yr?1 above which most ecosystems showed net losses of applied 15N tracer in response to N fertilizer addition.

Language
English
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Journal Name
Ecology
Keywords
atmospheric nitrogen deposition
carbon storage
data synthesis
meta-analysis
nitrogen retention and loss
stable isotopes