Abstract

Plants have difficulty absorbing phosphorus from volcanic ash soils owing to the adsorption of phosphorus by aluminum and iron in the soils. Thus, on volcanic ash soils, the phosphorus source for natural vegetation is expected to be organic matter, however, there is a lack of experimental evidence regarding this occurrence. Here, we studied the effect of organic matter on plant growth of some species that occur in primary successions of volcanic ash soil ecosystems, based on growth experiments and chemical analyses. We found that a large amount of inorganic phosphorus (but only a limited amount of inorganic nitrogen) is leached from fresh leaf litter of the pioneer spices Fallopia japonica at the initial stage of litter decomposition. Phosphorus from the fresh litter specifically activated the growth of subsequently invading nitrogen-fixing alder when immature volcanic soil was used for cultivation. In contrast, old organic matter in mature soil was merely a minor source of phosphorus. These results suggest that fresh litter of F. japonica is essential for growth of nitrogen-fixing alder because the litter supplies phosphorus. We consider that rapid phosphorus cycles in fresh litter-plant systems underlie the productivity of natural vegetation even in mature ecosystems established on volcanic ash soils.

Highlights

  • Plants have difficulty absorbing phosphorus from volcanic ash soils owing to the adsorption of phosphorus by aluminum and iron in the soils

  • We focused on organic matter and set up a working hypothesis that phosphorus leached from the organic matter promotes plant growth in volcanic ash soil

  • Compared to the control group, the growth of F. japonica and B. ermanii significantly increased in the groups treated with nitrogen and phosphorus (F. japonica: Con vs. nitrogen and phosphorus addition (NP), p = 0.0003; B. ermanii: Con vs. NP, p = 0.02), as shown in Fig. 2b and Supplementary Figure S1

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Summary

Introduction

Plants have difficulty absorbing phosphorus from volcanic ash soils owing to the adsorption of phosphorus by aluminum and iron in the soils. Old organic matter in mature soil was merely a minor source of phosphorus These results suggest that fresh litter of F. japonica is essential for growth of nitrogenfixing alder because the litter supplies phosphorus. Despite volcanic ash soil covering about 20% of the land in J­apan13,and phosphorus deficiency being a serious problem in Japanese a­ griculture[14], net primary production in Japanese forests is primarily is not low compared to other temperate zones of the ­world[15,16,17,18] This suggests that natural vegetation on the infertile volcanic ash soil obtain sufficient nutrition including phosphorus

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