Abstract

Immobilization and mobilization of nitrogen and phosphorus were investigated in relation to the nitrogen (L/N) ratio and lignin to the phosphorus (L/P) ratio as indicators of the nitrogen and phosphorus dynamics. The present study was carried out on upper and lower parts of a forest slope in a cool temperate forest in Japan. Net immobilization and net mobilization characterized the dynamics of nitrogen and phosphorus in 14 litter types and were related to the changes in the L/N and L/P ratio. The critical values of the L/N and L/P ratio at which the mobilization began were 23–25 and 500–620, respectively. In litter types with the L/N and L/P ratio higher than critical values, nitrogen and phosphorus were immobilized until the ratios reached at the critical values and then nitrogen and phosphorus began decreasing. In litter types with initial L/N and L/P ratios lower than or equal to the critical values, nitrogen and phosphorus were released from litter. The critical values of the L/N and L/P ratios showed convergent trends among litter types as compared to their initial values, and were approached to those of underlying humus layers. These results indicated the usefulness of L/N and L/P ratios as indicators of the nitrogen and phosphorus dynamics in the study site. The general validity of the L/N ratio as an indicator of nitrogen dynamics and the convergent trend of critical L/N ratio at 25–30 were demonstrated by a review of literature on lignin and nitrogen dynamics in 47 litter types in temperate and boreal forests.

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