COS 17-5 - Eleven years of elevated atmospheric CO2 exposure increases microbial respiration and decreases inorganic N concentrations in deep soil in a Florida scrub-oak ecosystem

Tuesday, August 5, 2008: 9:20 AM
102 E, Midwest Airlines Center
Duncan C. McKinley1, Julio C. Romero2, Bruce A. Hungate3, Bert G. Drake2 and James P. Megonigal2, (1)US Forest Service, Washington, (2)Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Edgewater, MD, (3)Center for Ecosystem Science and Society, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ
Background/Question/Methods

After eleven years of exposure to elevated atmospheric CO2 (ambient + 350 µmol CO2 mol-1), a scrub-oak forest has consistently maintained greater net primary productivity (NPP) compared to ambient treatments, despite inherent severe N limitation at the site.  We hypothesized that forest soils have alleviated potential N constraints by liberating more N in soil organic matter and through increased exploitation of deep sources of inorganic nitrogen.  We employed a suite of assays performed in the sixth and eleventh year of a long-term atmospheric CO2 enrichment experiment, designed to address N dynamics in the entire soil profile, which included: extractable inorganic N, microbial respiration, and potential C and N mineralization.

Results/Conclusions

In the eleventh year, we found significantly greater microbial respiration (F = 10.03, P ≤ 0.01) under elevated CO2, with the strongest differences at 0-100 cm.  However, field extractable N concentrations were less (F = 3.12, P = 0.096) at all depths to 190 cm under elevated CO2 with the strongest differences at 10-130 cm.  Conversely, net N mineralization, although not significant considering the entire profile (F = 0.58, P = 0.460), tended to greater under elevated CO2 at all depths to 190 cm and was significantly greater at 30-130 cm.  In contrast, in the sixth year, differences in field extractable N and net N mineralization were constrained to the top 30 cm, and there were no differences in microbial respiration.  Similar net N mineralization rates, but lower extractable inorganic N concentrations in elevated CO2 treatments suggests more intensive utilization of inorganic N in almost the entire soil profile.  Enhanced microbial activity may promote a sustained supply of inorganic N in elevated CO2 treatments.  Also, since the sixth year of this long-term study, exploitation of deep inorganic N appears to be increasingly important in avoiding increased plant N limitation, maintaining greater NNP under elevated CO2.

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