shoestring2014 6-respiration

22
Soil Respiration Responds to Nutrient Addition in Northern Hardwood Forests Tim Fahey, Cornell University

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Tim Fahey and Melany Fisk's presentations. Hubbard Brook Annual Cooperator's Meeting, W. Thornton, NH, July 10, 2014.

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Page 2: Shoestring2014 6-respiration
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Components of Soil Respiration

• Heterotrophic respiration by microbial decomposers

• Root-associated respiration (supplied by belowground C allocation)

- respiration of fine roots

- respiration of mycorrhizal fungi

- respiration of other rhizosphere microbes

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Seasonal Pattern of Soil Respiration in Hubbard Brook Sites

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Pre-treatment Pattern of Soil Respiration

Both soil respiration and estimated belowground carbon allocation declined significantly with increasing soil nutrient availability across the MELNHE sites

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-3 0 3 6 9

400

500

600

700

800

Oe

0 2 4 6 8

Bel

ow

gro

und

C a

llocat

ion (

gC

m-2

yr-1

)

400

500

600

700

800

Oa

net nitrification (ug g-1

)

0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8

400

500

600

700

800

0-10 cm

2000 3000 4000 5000 6000 7000

Oe

400 800 1200 1600 2000

Oa

exchangable Ca (ug g-1

)

0 100 200 300 400 500

0-10 cm

R2=0.96

R2=0.80

R2=0.90

R2=0.73

R2=0.94

Pre-treatment observations for a sub-set of the sites

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Hypotheses

1. Addition of a tree growth-limiting nutrient will reduce belowground carbon allocation resulting in lower root-associated respiration

1a. Colimitation would be indicated by strong response of soil respiration to addition of N + P

2. Reduction of soil respiration will be greatest in most infertilesites

3. Nitrogen addition might suppress activity of microbial decomposers thereby complicating interpretation of respiration response

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Response ratio of soil respiration to nutrient additions

We express the treatment effect on soil respiration as the ratio:

% response ratio= ((fertilized – control)/control) * 100

Thus a negative response ratio indicates a reduction of soil respiration in the treated plots

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N + P Plots

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Note: no clear evidence of a decline of heterotrophic respiration in response to nutrient addition (next talk)

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Conclusions

• Response of soil respiration to nutrient addition varies linearly with pre-treatment site fertility

• Belowground carbon allocation in infertile sites decreases significantly in response to nutrient additions (resulting in tree aboveground growth increase?)

• Some indication of possible co-limitation by N and P on infertile sites

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Acknowledgements

Kikang, Hongzhang, Melany, Ruth and a cast of thousands

Page 14: Shoestring2014 6-respiration

What limits microbial respiration?

Oie

CO2

incorportation

into Oa

Litter and root inputs

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Questions:

• Do N or P limit microbial respiration in forest floor?

• Is this limitation secondary to that of C?

• Does forest age or site affect respiratory responses?

3 sites:

• Jeffers Brook

• HBEF

• BEF

Page 16: Shoestring2014 6-respiration

Approach:

• Lab incubations

• Treatments:

Control

C (litter)

nutrient (N or P)

C + nutrient

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• N suppressed

respiration

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• N suppressed

respiration

• With added C, P

increased

respiration

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N effect

microbial biomass

accumulation: 256

(101)

DON accumulation:

440 (969)

Litter effect

inorganic N reduced

by 82 (23) ug N/g

Where the added N (mg/g soil) went:

Ni:

137 (27)DON:

115 (14)

MBN:

797 (95)

Ni:

56 (7)DON:

114 (25)

MBN:

877 (77)

Ni:

840 (87)DON:

554 (99)

MBN:

1082 (93)

control

+ litter

+N

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cellulases

Hypothesized C, N, P interactions: Low N

Microbial biomass synthesis

CO2

Respiration

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cellulases

Hypothesized C, N, P interactions: High N

Microbial biomass synthesis

Respiration

CO2

Page 22: Shoestring2014 6-respiration

Why would P limitation be

induced by added C?

Hypothesized C, N, P interactions:

N may also limit enzyme production, C availability.

We predict that adding N and P together should increase microbial

respiration