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Research article2014Peer reviewed

Stable nitrogen isotope patterns of trees and soils altered by long-term nitrogen and phosphorus addition to a lowland tropical rainforest

Mayor, Jordan; Wright, S. Joseph; Schuur, Edward A. G.; Brooks, Mollie E.; Turner, Benjamin L.

Abstract

Foliar nitrogen (N) isotope ratios (delta N-15) are used as a proxy for N-cycling processes, including the "openness" of the N cycle and the use of distinct N sources, but there is little experimental support for such proxies in lowland tropical forest. To address this, we examined the delta N-15 values of soluble soil N and canopy foliage of four tree species after 13 years of factorial N and P addition to a mature lowland rainforest. We hypothesized that N addition would lead to N-15-enriched soil N forms due to fractionating losses, whereas P addition would reduce N losses as the plants and microbes adjusted their stoichiometric demands. Chronic N addition increased the concentration and delta N-15 value of soil nitrate and delta N-15 in live and senesced leaves in two of four tree species, but did not affect ammonium or dissolved organic N. Phosphorus addition significantly increased foliar delta N-15 in one tree species and elicited significant N x P interactions in two others due to a reduction in foliar delta N-15 enrichment under N and P co-addition. Isotope mixing models indicated that three of four tree species increased their use of nitrate relative to ammonium following N addition, supporting the expectation that tropical trees use the most available form of mineral N. Previous observations that anthropogenic N deposition in this tropical region have led to increasing foliar delta N-15 values over decadal time-scales is now mechanistically linked to greater usage of N-15-enriched nitrate.

Keywords

Ecosystem ecology; Gigante Fertilization Experiment; Mass balance mixing models; Panama; Stoichiometry

Published in

Biogeochemistry
2014, volume: 119, number: 1-3, pages: 293-306

SLU Authors

  • Mayor, Jordan

    • Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

UKÄ Subject classification

Forest Science

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-014-9966-1

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/62551