Increased soil stable nitrogen isotopic ratio following phosphorus enrichment: historical patterns and tests of two hypotheses in a phosphorus-limited wetland
We used a P enrichment gradient in the Everglades to investigate patterns of the stable N isotopic ratio (δ¹⁵N) in peat profiles as an indicator of historic eutrophication of this wetland. We also tested two hypotheses to explain the effects of P on increased δ¹⁵N of organic matter including: (1) in...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Oecologia 2007-08, Vol.153 (1), p.99-109 |
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Zusammenfassung: | We used a P enrichment gradient in the Everglades to investigate patterns of the stable N isotopic ratio (δ¹⁵N) in peat profiles as an indicator of historic eutrophication of this wetland. We also tested two hypotheses to explain the effects of P on increased δ¹⁵N of organic matter including: (1) increased N mineralization/N loss, and (2) reduced isotopic discrimination during macrophyte N uptake. Spatial patterns of δ¹⁵N in surface litter and soil (0-10 cm) mimic those of the aboveground macrophytes (Typha domingensis Pers. and Cladium jamaicense Crantz). Peat profiles also show increased δ¹⁵N in the peat accumulated in areas near the historic P discharges since the early 1960s. The increased δ¹⁵N of bulk peat correlated well with both measured increases in soil total P and the historical beginning of nutrient discharges into this wetland. In 15-day bottle incubations of soil, added P had no effect on the δ¹⁵N of NH ₄ ⁺ and significantly increased the δ¹⁵N of water-extractable organic N. Measurements of surface soils collected during a field mesocosm experiment also revealed no significant effect of P on δ¹⁵N even after 5 years of P addition. In contrast, δ¹⁵N of leaf and root tissues of hydroponically grown Typha and Cladium were shown to increase up to 12[per thousand] when grown at elevated levels of P and fixed levels of N (as NH ₄ ⁺ ). The magnitude of changes in δ¹⁵N resulting from altered discrimination during N uptake is significant compared with other mechanisms affecting plant δ¹⁵N, and suggests that this may be the dominant mechanism affecting δ¹⁵N of organic matter following P enrichment. The results of this study have implications for the interpretation of δ¹⁵N as an indicator of shifts in relative N limitation in wetland ecosystems, and also stress the importance of experimental validation in interpreting δ¹⁵N patterns. |
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ISSN: | 0029-8549 1432-1939 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00442-007-0711-5 |