Abstract

The composition of canopy throughfall water in an oak-birch woodland, heavily affected by atmospheric deposition of N and S, changed markedly upon contact with the above-ground parts of the ground vegetation, which consisted mainly of bracken. The fluxes of nitrate and H+ decreased, simultaneously with an increase in the flux of bicarbonate, indicative of above-ground uptake of nitrate by the ground vegetation. This above-ground assimilation takes place in spite of abundant availability of inorganic nitrogen in the root zone of the ground vegetation. Fluxes of phosphate were somewhat lower, and those of ammonium somewhat higher in throughfall of the ground vegetation than in that of the tree layer. Although those differences were not statistically significant, they do suggest assimilation of some P and extra net dry deposition of atmospheric ammonia below the tree canopies.

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