PL EN


Preferencje help
Widoczny [Schowaj] Abstrakt
Liczba wyników
Tytuł artykułu

Soil C:P Ratio along Elevational Gradients in Picea schrenkiana Forest of Tianshan Mountains

Autorzy
Warianty tytułu
Języki publikacji
EN
Abstrakty
EN
Forest soils potentially store a large pool of carbon and phosphorus. A deep understanding of the total carbon and phosphorus stock in forest soils is vital in the assessment of the nutrients dynamics in forest ecosystems. This study examined the effects of elevation, soil depth, and climatic variables, specifically mean annual temperature (MAT) and mean annual precipitation (MAP), on soil carbon and organic phosphorus in Schrenk's spruce (Picea schrenkiana) forest at Tianshan Mountains. Results showed that soil organic carbon (SOC) significantly increased while organic phosphorus decreased with elevation. Interestingly, carbon increased faster with increasing elevation in the alluvial horizon than in the leached horizon, demonstrating the important role of deep soils in carbon sequestration potential. SOC concentration decreased with soil depth, whereas phosphorus concentration initially decreased and then increased. SOC had no significant relationships with MAT and MAP, whereas phosphorus concentration decreased with MAT. Similar to the impacts of MAT and MAP on SOC, these two climatic variables also exerted no significant influence on C:P ratio.
Rocznik
Strony
325--336
Opis fizyczny
Bibliogr. 61 poz., mapa, wykr.
Twórcy
autor
  • College of Resource and Environmental Science, Xinjiang University, Urumqi 830046, China
  • Key Laboratory of Oasis Ecology of the Ministry of Education, Xinjiang University, Urumqi 830046, China
autor
  • Institute of Desert Meteorology, China Meteorological Administration, Urumqi 830002, China
autor
  • College of Resource and Environmental Science, Xinjiang University, Urumqi 830046, China
  • Key Laboratory of Oasis Ecology of the Ministry of Education, Xinjiang University, Urumqi 830046, China
Bibliografia
  • [1] Allison S. D., Treseder K. K. 2010 – Warming and drying suppress microbial activity and carbon cycling in boreal forest soils – Glob. Chang. Biol.14: 2898-2909.
  • [2] Aminem E., Chang S., Zhang Y., Qiu Y., He P. 2014 – Altitudinal distribution rule of Picea schrenkiana forest's soil organic carbon and its influencing factors – Acta Ecologica Sinica, 34: 1626-1634.
  • [3] Angelika T., Ernstdetlef S.2006 – Carbon dynamics in successional and afforested spruce stands in Thuringia and the Alps – Glob. Chang. Biol.12: 325-342.
  • [4] Boot C. M., Hall E. K., Denef K., Baron J. S. 2015 – Long-term reactive nitrogen loading alters soil carbon and microbial community properties in a subalpine forest ecosystem – Soil Biol. Biochem.92: 211-220.
  • [5] Braun S., Thomas V. F. D., Quiring R., Flückiger W. 2010 – Does nitrogen deposition increase forest production? The role of phosphorus – Environ. Pollut.158: 2043-2052.
  • [6] Butler S. M., Melillo J. M., Johnson J., Mohan J., Steudler P. A., Lux H., Burrows E., Smith R., Vario C., Scott L. 2012 – Soil warming alters nitrogen cycling in a New England forest: implications for ecosystem function and structure – Oecologia, 168: 819-828.
  • [7] Cleveland C. C., Liptzin D. 2007 – C: N: P stoichiometry in soil: is there a “Redfield ratio” for the microbial biomass? – Bio-geochemistry, 85: 235-252.
  • [8] Cross A. F., Schlesinger W. H. 1995 – A literature review and evaluation of the.Hedley fractionation: Applications to the biogeochemical cycle of soil phosphorus in natural ecosystems – Geoderma, 64: 197-214.
  • [9] Daufresne T., Loreau M. 2001 – Plant-herbivore interactions and ecological stoichiometry: when do herbivores determine plant nutrient limitation? – Ecol. Lett.4: 196-206.
  • [10] Davidson E. A., Janssens I. A. 2006 – Temperature sensitivity of soil carbon decomposition and feedbacks to climate change – Nature, 440: 165-173.
  • [11] DiManno N. M., Ostertag R. 2016 – Reproductive response to nitrogen and phosphorus fertilization along the Hawaiian archipelago's natural soil fertility gradient – Oecologia, 180: 245-255.
  • [12] Eswaran H., Van Den Berg E., Reich P. 1993 – Organic carbon in soils of the world – Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J.57: 192-194.
  • [13] Fan H., Wu J., Liu W., Yuan Y., Hu L., Cai Q. 2015 – Linkages of plant and soil C: N: P stoichiometry and their relationships to forest growth in subtropical plantations – Plant Soil.392: 127-138.
  • [14] Finzi A. C., Van Breemen N., Canham C. D.1998 – Canopy tree-soil interactions within temperate forests: species effects on soil carbon and nitrogen – Ecol. Appl.8: 440-446.
  • [15] Fisher J. B., Malhi Y., Torres I. C., Metcalfe D. B., van de Weg M. J., Meir P., Silva-Espejo J. E., Huasco W. H. 2013 – Nutrient limitation in rainforests and cloud forests along a 3,000-m elevation gradient in the Peruvian Andes – Oecologia, 172: 889-902.
  • [16] Ford H., Roberts A., Jones L. 2016 – Nitrogen and phosphorus co-limitation and grazing moderate nitrogen impacts on plant growth and nutrient cycling in sand dune grassland – Sci. Total Environ.542: 203-209.
  • [17] Freppaz M., Williams B. L., Edwards A. C., Scalenghe R., Zanini E. 2007 – Simulating soil freeze/thaw cycles typical of winter alpine conditions: Implications for N and P availability – Applied Soil Ecology, 35: 247-255.
  • [18] Fu W. 2015 – Study on the characteristics of forest soil's nutrients in Mianyang Guansi River. – Sichuan Agricultural University, 52 pp.
  • [19] Gan Q. 2013 – Nutrients stoichiometry of soil and plant at different vegetation degradation stages in northern Greater Xing'an Mountains – Northeast Forestry University.
  • [20] Goodale C. L., Apps M. J., Birdsey R. A., Field C. B., Heath L. S., Houghton R. A., Jenkins J. C., Kohlmaier G. H., Kurz W., Liu S. 2002 – Forest carbon sinks in the Northern Hemisphere – Ecol. Appl.12: 891-899.
  • [21] Guo L. B., Gifford R. M. 2002 – Soil carbon stocks and land use change: a meta analysis – Glob. Chang. Biol.8: 345-360.
  • [22] Hengl T., de Jesus J. M., Macmillan R. A., Batjes N. H., Heuvelink G. B., Ribeiro E., Samuel-Rosa A., Kempen B., Leenaars J. G., Walsh M. G. 2014 – SoilGrids1km--global soil information based on automated mapping – PLoS ONE, 9: e105992.
  • [23] Hijmans R. J., Cameron S. E., Parra J. L., Jones P. G., Jarvis A. 2005 – Very high resolution interpolated climate surfaces for global land areas – International Journal of Climatology, 25: 1965-1978.
  • [24] Huang W., Liu J., Tang X., Huang Y., Liu S., Chu G., Zhou G. 2009 – Inorganic Nitrogen and Available Phosphorus Concentrations in the Soils of Five Forests at Dinghushan,China – Chin. J. Appl. Environ. Biol.2009: 441-447.
  • [25] Jobbágy E. G., Jackson R. B. 2008 – The vertical distribution of soil organic carbon and its relation to climate and vegetation – Ecol. Appl.10: 423-436.
  • [26] Laliberté E., Lambers H., Burgess T. I., Wright S. J. 2015 – Phosphorus limitation, soil-borne pathogens and the coexistence of plant species in hyperdiverse forests and shrublands – New Phytol.206: 507-521.
  • [27] Li X., Che K., Yang Y., Wang H., Ma W., Wang H., Huang R. 2014 – Variation pattern of soil nutrients in forests at different altitudes at upstream of Bailongjiang River – Journal of Gansu Agricultural University, 49: 131-137.
  • [28] Li X., Ye D., Liang H., Zhu H., Qin L., Zhu Y., Wen Y. 2015 – Effects of Successive Rotation Regimes on Carbon Stocks in Eucalyptus Plantations in Subtropical China Measured over a Full Rotation – PLoS ONE, 10: e0132858.
  • [29] Liu J., Meng Y., Bao Y., Jia J., Zhou L., Zhou W., Yu D., Dai L. 2013 – Nutrient stoichiometry of Betula ermanii and Rhododendron aureum and related affecting factors on timberline of Changbai Mountains, Northeast China – Chinese Journal of Ecology, 32: 3117-3124.
  • [30] Müller M., Oelmann Y., Schickhoff U., Böhner J., Scholten T. 2017 – Himalayan treeline soil and foliar C: N: P stoichiometry indicate nutrient shortage with elevation – Geoderma, 291: 21-32.
  • [31] Mariotte P., Canarini A., Dijkstra F. A. 2017 – Stoichiometric N: P flexibility and mycorrhizal symbiosis favour plant resistance against drought Mariotte P., Canarini A., Dijkstra F. A. 2017 – Stoichiometric N: P flexibility and mycorrhizal symbiosis favour plant resistance against drought – J. Ecol.105, https://doi.org/10111.1365-2745.12731.
  • [32] Martiny A. C., Ma L., Mouginot C., Chandler J. W., Zinser E. R. 2016 – Interactions between Thermal Acclimation, Growth Rate, and Phylogeny Influence Prochlorococcus Elemental Stoichiometry – PLoS ONE, 11: e0168291.
  • [33] Melvin A. M., Mack M. C., Johnstone J. F., McGuire A. D., Genet H., Schuur E. A. 2015 – Differences in ecosystem carbon distribution and nutrient cycling linked to forest tree species composition in a mid-successional boreal forest – Ecosystems, 18: 1472-1488.
  • [34] Nottingham A. T., Turner B. L., Stott A. W., Tanner E. V. J. 2015 – Nitrogen and phosphorus constrain labile and stable carbon turnover in lowland tropical forest soils – Soil Biol. Biochem.80: 26-33.
  • [35] Olsen S. R., Sommers L. E. 1982 – Phosphorus (In: Methods of Soil Analysis. Part 2. Chemical and Microbiological Properties, Eds: R. R. Miller, D. R. Keeney) – American Society of Agronomy, Madison, WI, pp 403-430.
  • [36] Qi P., Liu X., Zhao W., Niu Y., Zhang R. 2015 – Soil Nutrient Characteristics of Picea crassifolia Forest in the Middle Segment of Qilian Mountains – Mountain Research, 33: 538-545.
  • [37] Rodeghiero M., Cescatti A.2005 – Main determinants of forest soil respiration along an elevation/temperature gradient in the Italian Alps – Glob. Chang. Biol.11: 1024-1041.
  • [38] Saetre P., Brandtberg P.-O., Lundkvist H., Bengtsson J. 1999 – Soil organisms and carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus mineralisation in Norway spruce and mixed Norway spruce - Birch stands – Biol. Fer-til. Soils, 28: 382-388.
  • [39] Shi S., Peng C., Wang M., Zhu Q., Yang G., Yang Y., Xi T., Zhang T. 2016 – A global meta-analysis of changes in soil carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur, and stoichiometric shifts after forestation – Plant & Soil, 407: 323-340.
  • [40] Song Y., Zhao X., Mao Z., Sun T. 2013 – SOC decomposition of four typical broadleaved Korean pine communities in Xiaoxing'an Mountain – Acta Ecologica Sinica, 33: 443-453.
  • [41] Tachikawa T., Hato M., Kaku M., Iwasaki A. 2011 – Characteristics of ASTER GDEM version 2.2011 IEEE International Geo-science and Remote Sensing Symposium, pp 3657-3660.
  • [42] Tashi S., Singh B., Keitel C., Adams M. 2016 – Soil carbon and nitrogen stocks in forests along an altitudinal gradient in the eastern Himalayas and a meta-analysis of global data – Glob. Chang. Biol.22: 2255-2268.
  • [43] Tian Y. W., Huang Z. L., Xiao W. F., Zeng L. X., Xiang Y. 2015 – Vertical distribution pattern of soil organic carbon of Lanlingxi watershed in Three Gorges Reservoir area – Chinese Journal of Ecology, 34: 157-161.
  • [44] van Huysen T. L., Perakis S. S., Harmon M. E. 2016 – Decomposition drives convergence of forest litter nutrient stoichiometry following phosphorus addition – Plant & Soil, 406: 1-14.
  • [45] Velthuis M., Van Deelen E., Van Donk E., Zhang P., Bakker E. S. 2017 – Impact of Temperature and Nutrients on Carbon: Nutrient Tissue Stoichiometry of Submerged Aquatic Plants: An Experiment and Meta-Analysis – Front. Plant Sci.8: 655, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2017.00655.
  • [46] Vitousek P. M., Porder S., Houlton B. Z., Chadwick O. A. 2010 – Terrestrial phosphorus limitation: mechanisms, implications, and nitrogen-phosphorus interactions – Ecol. Appl.20: 5-15.
  • [47] Wang D., Geng Z. C., She D., He W. X., Hou L. 2015 – Soil organic carbon storage and vertical distribution of carbon and nitrogen across different forest types in the Qinling Mountains – Acta Ecologica Sinica, 35: 5421-5429.
  • [48] Wang Y., Zhang X., Huang C. 2009 – Spatial variability of soil total nitrogen and soil total phosphorus under different land uses in a small watershed on the Loess Plateau, China – Geoderma, 150: 141-149.
  • [49] Wei X., Zheng X., Zhang S. 2014 – Forest soil physicochemical properties along different altitudinal gradients at Huoditang in the Qinling Mountains – Journal of Northeast Forestry University, 29: 9-14.
  • [50] Wiesmeier M., Spörlein P., Geuß U., Hangen E., Haug S., Reischl A., Schilling B., Lützow M. V., Kögel-Knabner I. 2012 – Soil organic carbon stocks in southeast Germany (Bavaria) as affected by land use, soil type and sampling depth – Glob. Chang. Biol.18: 2233-2245.
  • [51] Wu H. 2015 – The Relationship between Terrain Factors and Spatial Variability of Soil Nutrients for Pine-Oak Mixed Forest in Qinling Mountains – Journal of Natural Resources, 30: 858-869.
  • [52] Xie J., Chang S., Zhang Y., Wang H., Song C., He P., Sun X. 2016 – Plant and soil ecological stoichiometry with vertical zonality on the northern slope of the middle Tianshan Mountains – Acta Ecologica Sinica, 36: 4363-4372.
  • [53] Xu H. 2010 – On the spatial distribution patterns of soil organic carbon in the northern slope in the middle section of Tianshan Mountains – China University of Mining and Technology.
  • [54] Yang Q., Niu Y., Jing W.2015 – Distribution Characteristics of Total Phosphorus and Total Potassium for Soil in Picea crassifolia Plantation at Different Altitudes in Haxi Forest Area at the East Segment of Qilian Mountains – Protection Forest Science & Technology, pp 14-17.
  • [55] Yang Y., Liu B., Yang X., Han C. 2014 – Soil stoichiometry characteristics of artificial Caragana korshinskii shrubs with different density in desert steppe – Bulletin of Soil and Water Conservation, 34: 67-73.
  • [56] Yeomans J. C., Bremner J. M. 1988 – A rapid and precise method for routine determination of organic carbon in soil – Communications in Soil Science & Plant Analysis, 19: 1467-1476.
  • [57] Zhang K., Su Y., Wang T., Liu T. 2016 – Soil stoichiometry characteristics of Haloxylon ammodendron with different plantation age in the desert-oasis ecotone, north China – Acta Ecologica Sinica, 36: 3235-3243.
  • [58] Zhang P., Chen N. L., Zhang T. 2009 – Characteristics of Soil Organic Carbon under Picea crassifolia Forest and Relationship with Environmental Factors in Upper Reaches of Heihe River – Journal of Desert Research, 29: 445-450.
  • [59] Zhang W., Liu S., Ye Y., Chen H., Wang K., Wei G. 2013 – Spatial variability of soil nutrients and its influencing factors in typical karst virgin forest – Transactions of the Chinese Society of Agricultural Engineering, 29: 93-101.
  • [60] Zhao W., Liu X., Jin M., Zhang X., Che Z., Jing W., Wang S., Niu Y., Qi P., Li W. 2016 – Ecological Stoichiometric Characteristics of Carbon, Nitrogen and Phosphorus in Leaf-Litter-Soil System of Picea crassifolia Forest in the Qilian Mountains – Acta Pedologica Sinica, 53: 477-489.
  • [61] Zhou H. P., Gao C., Sun B., Zhao H. C., Zhang T. L. 2007 – Spatial Variation Characteristics and Its Driving Factors of Total Phosphorus in Topsoil of Chaohu Lake Watershed – Journal of Agro-Environment Science, 26: 2112-2117.
Uwagi
Opracowanie rekordu w ramach umowy 509/P-DUN/2018 ze środków MNiSW przeznaczonych na działalność upowszechniającą naukę (2019).
Typ dokumentu
Bibliografia
Identyfikator YADDA
bwmeta1.element.baztech-403a8780-0e8c-4447-84cf-7f57775cc4db
JavaScript jest wyłączony w Twojej przeglądarce internetowej. Włącz go, a następnie odśwież stronę, aby móc w pełni z niej korzystać.