Unexpected high retention of 15N-labeled nitrogen in a tropical legume forest under long-term nitrogen enrichment

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  • Jinhua Mao
  • Qinggong Mao
  • Gundersen, Per
  • Geshere A. Gurmesa
  • Wei Zhang
  • Juan Huang
  • Senhao Wang
  • Andi Li
  • Yufang Wang
  • Yabing Guo
  • Rongzhen Liu
  • Jiangming Mo
  • Mianhai Zheng

The responses of forests to nitrogen (N) deposition largely depend on the fates of deposited N within the ecosystem. Nitrogen-fixing legume trees widely occur in terrestrial forests, but the fates of deposited N in legume-dominated forests remain unclear, which limit a global evaluation of N deposition impacts and feedbacks on carbon sequestration. Here, we performed the first ecosystem-scale 15N labeling experiment in a typical legume-dominated forest as well as in a nearby non-legume forest to determine the fates of N deposition between two different forest types and to explore their underlying mechanisms. The 15N was sprayed bimonthly for 1 year to the forest floor in control and N addition (50 kg N ha−1 year−1 for 10 years) plots in both forests. We unexpectedly found a strong capacity of the legume forest to retain deposited N, with 75 ± 5% labeled N recovered in plants and soils, which was higher than that in the non-legume forest (56 ± 4%). The higher 15N recovery in legume forest was mainly driven by uptake by the legume trees, in which 15N recovery was approximately 15% more than that in the nearby non-legume trees. This indicates higher N-demand by the legume than non-legume trees. Mineral soil was the major sink for deposited N, with 39 ± 4% and 34 ± 3% labeled N retained in the legume and non-legume forests, respectively. Moreover, N addition did not significantly change the 15N recovery patterns of both forests. Overall, these findings indicate that legume-dominated forests act as a strong sink for deposited N regardless of high soil N availability under long-term atmospheric N deposition, which suggest a necessity to incorporate legume-dominated forests into N-cycling models of Earth systems to improve the understanding and prediction of terrestrial N budgets and the global N deposition effects.

Original languageEnglish
JournalGlobal Change Biology
Volume28
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)1529–1543
Number of pages15
ISSN1354-1013
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

    Research areas

  • N tracer, fate of deposited nitrogen, mature-legume forest, nitrogen deposition, nitrogen-retention, tropical forest

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