Carbon and Nitrogen Stoichiometry and Nitrogen Cycling Rates in Streams

Stoichiometric analyses can be used to investigate the linkages between N and C cycles and how these linkages influence biogeochemistry at many scales, from components of individual ecosystems up to the biosphere. N-specific NH₄⁺ uptake rates were measured in eight streams using short-term$\^{15} {\...

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Veröffentlicht in:Oecologia 2004-08, Vol.140 (3), p.458-467
Hauptverfasser: Dodds, Walter K., Tank, Jennifer L., Pontius, Jeffrey, Hamilton, Stephen K., Grimm, Nancy B., Bowden, William B., McDowell, William H., Peterson, Bruce J., Valett, H. Maurice, Webster, Jackson R., Gregory, Stan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Stoichiometric analyses can be used to investigate the linkages between N and C cycles and how these linkages influence biogeochemistry at many scales, from components of individual ecosystems up to the biosphere. N-specific NH₄⁺ uptake rates were measured in eight streams using short-term$\^{15} {\rm N} $tracer additions, and C to N ratios (C:N) were determined from living and non-living organic matter collected from ten streams. These data were also compared to previously published data compiled from studies of lakes, ponds, wetlands, forests, and tundra. There was a significant negative relationship between C:N and N-specific uptake rate; C:N could account for 41% of the variance in N-specific uptake rate across all streams, and the relationship held in five of eight streams. Most of the variation in N-specific uptake rate was contributed by detrital and primary producer compartments with large values of C:N and small values for N-specific uptake rate. In streams, particulate materials are not as likely to move downstream as dissolved N, so if N is cycling in a particulate compartment, N retention is likely to be greater. Together, these data suggest that N retention may depand in part on C:N of living and non-living organic matter in streams. Factors that alter C:N of stream ecosystem compartments, such as removal of riparian vegetation or N fertilization, may influence the amount of retention attributed to these ecosystem compartments by causing shifts in stoichiometry. Our analysis suggests that C:N of ecosystem compartments can be used to linf N-cycling models across streams.
ISSN:0029-8549
1432-1939
DOI:10.1007/s00442-004-1599-y