Abstract
Background: The complementary use of different forms of soil nitrogen (N) might lead to a higher productivity of mixed forests than monocultures, but convincing evidence for temperate mixed forests is scarce.Aims: We searched for species differences in N uptake rates and the preference for NH4+, NO3− or glycine among five temperate broad−leaved tree species (Acer pseudoplatanus, Carpinus betulus, Fagus sylvatica, Fraxinus excelsior, Tilia cordata) in a mature mixed stand.Methods: 15N tracer was added to the soil and its accumulation in fine root biomass was analysed after 10 min, 1 h and 1 d.Results: The estimated root uptake rates of the species were in the range of 5–46 µg N g−1 root h−1 for NH4+, 6–86 µg N g−1 h−1 for NO3− and 4–29 µg N g−1 h−1 for glycine during the first hour after tracer application. Carpinus, Tilia and Acer tended to prefer NH4+ over NO3−, while Fraxinus showed equal preference for both N forms and Fagus seemed to prefer NO3−.Conclusions: The five co-existing tree species differed in uptake rates and partly in their N form preference, but complementarity in the use of different N forms seems to be of minor importance in this forest because tree species appear to be rather flexible in their N form use.
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