Abstract

Increasing atmospheric nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) deposition affect soil nutrient availability and biogeochemical cycles, yet the impacts on the regulatory processes of soil P in P-poor tropical rainforests are not well understood. Based on a ten-year N and P addition experiment in primary and secondary rainforests in Hainan, China, we investigated the effects of N and P additions on four soil P fractions, acid phosphatase (ACP) activity, kinetic characteristics and arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) diversity. Our results showed that P addition significantly increased soil available P (AP), but had no significant effects on microbial P and microbial N:P ratio in both rainforests. Late-successional primary rainforest had higher microbial P and lower N:P ratio compared to early-successional secondary rainforest, suggesting that forest succession would not aggravate microbial P limitation. Plants and microorganisms accessed most inorganic P by releasing hydrion and organic acids to mobilize soil P, whereas inorganic P accessed by root interception and organic P readily mineralized by ACP and phytase enzymes were relatively low. In the primary rainforest, ACP and kinetic parameters were significantly increased under low N addition, while P addition remarkedly declined ACP activity and AM diversity in both rainforests. Additionally, CaCl2 extractable P, citrate extractable P, and HCl extractable P in the two forests were significantly positively associated with soil AP, but negatively associated with ACP activity, kinetic parameters and AM diversity. Therefore, the transformations of organic P were inhibited after the exogenous addition of inorganic P. Overall, our study evaluates the soil P acquisition strategies and regulatory processes in tropical rainforests with different successional stages, which can be used to predict the effects of long-term N and P deposition on soil P cycling in P-poor tropical rainforests.

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