The Nitrogen Cycle in Soil – Climate Impact and Methodological Challenges in Natural Ecosystems
Sammanfattning
Nitrogen (N) is a fundamental element for life, and limiting in many terrestrial ecosystems. In
non-N-fertilized ecosystems, the N inputs can be low, and the nutrient availability for plants is
determined by the internal cycling of N. The N availability might alter with different factors,
such as climate change, forest management practices, and tree species. Soil N cycling is
investigated using stable isotopes, where the activity in the soil can be monitored over time.
The overall aim of this thesis is to increase the understanding of the N cycle in natural and
semi-natural ecosystems and the environmental factors important for nutrient cycling.
The results show that all sites investigated in this thesis had higher NH4+ turnover than NO3-
turnover. The mineralization rates were highest in the site with the lowest C:N ratio, and the
lowest mineralization rates and the highest C:N ratio in the spruce forests, which demonstrate
the importance of organic matter quality on gross N transformation rates. The N cycle
responses to combined climate treatments were generally lower than responses to single
climate treatments. For some processes, we observed opposing responses for eCO2 as single
and main treatment compared to the plots receiving the full treatment. This point to the
importance of conducting multifactor climate change experiments, as many feedback controls
are yet unknown. Gross nitrification was lowered with fertilization in a northern boreal forest,
which is an interesting result in the light of the very low nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions from
the investigated site, despite heavy annual fertilization of 50–70 kg ha-1. Moreover, the results from an experiment with soil of common origin and land history showed generally higher
gross mineralization, immobilization and nitrification rates a beech stand compared to a
spruce stand. The beech stand had also higher initial concentration of nitrate (NO3-) which
indicates a more NO3- based N cycling. Finally, numerical modeling together with 15N tracing
is an improvement for simultaneously determining free amino acid (FAA) mineralization,
peptide depolymerization and gross N mineralization rates, compared to analytical solutions. This thesis confirms that N cycling in natural ecosystems is governed by the properties of the soil, vegetation and climate, but also that the experimental set-up strongly affects the outcome of the experiment. In turn, this affects the potential of doing reliable experiments, especially in ecosystems where the external inputs of N are very low. The thesis also highlights some methodological challenges that lie in the future of N cycling research.
Delarbeten
Björsne, A.-K., Rutting, T., and Ambus, P. (2014) Combined Climate Factors Alleviate Changes in Gross Soil Nitrogen Dynamics in Heathlands, Biogeochemistry, 120, 191-201, ::doi::10.1007/s10533-014-9990-1 Björsne, A-K., Weslien, P., Kasimir, Å. Klemedtsson, L.,
Rütting, T. Low N2O Emissions and Gross Nitrification in a Boreal Spruce Forest Soil, Despite Heavy Nitrogen Fertilization
(Manuscript) Björsne, A-K., Rütting, T. Tree Species Influence
on the Gross N Dynamics in Soil (Manuscript) Andresen L.C., Björsne A-K., Bodé S, Klemedtsson L, Boeckx P, Rütting T (2016) Simultaneous Quantification of Depolymerization and Mineralization Rates by a Novel 15N Tracing Model. SOIL 2(3): 433-442 ::doi::10.5194/soil-2-433-2016
Examinationsnivå
Doctor of Philosophy
Universitet
Göteborgs universitet. Naturvetenskapliga fakulteten
Institution
Department of Earth Sciences ; Institutionen för geovetenskaper
Disputation
Fredagen den 21 september 2018, kl. 10.00, Hörsalen, Institutionen för Geovetenskaper, Guldhedsgatan 5C
Datum för disputation
2018-09-21
Datum
2018-08-31Författare
Björsne, Anna-Karin
Nyckelord
Nitrogen cycle
15N tracing experiments
gross N transformation rates
climate change
climate treatments
mineralization
nitrification
forest fertilization
nitrous oxide emissions
boreal forest soil
tree species
soil organic matter
C:N ratio
Publikationstyp
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7833-113-0 (Print)
978-91-7833-114-7 (PDF)
Språk
eng