Abstract
During three consecutive years with contrasting precipitation, we analysed the relationship between strategies of N conservation in the dominant plant functional groups (perennial grasses and evergreen shrubs) of the Patagonian Monte and the main components of N cycling in soil. We hypothesised that the different patterns of N conservation in perennial grasses and evergreen shrubs would have direct consequences for soil-N, inorganic-N release and microbial-N flush in soil. In autumn and late spring of 1999, 2000, and 2001, we assessed N and C concentration in green and senesced leaves, N-resorption efficiency and C/N ratio in senesced leaves of three dominant species of each plant functional group. In the soil associated with species of each plant functional group, we determined N and C concentration, potential-N mineralisation, and the associated microbial-N flush. Slow-growing evergreen shrubs exhibited low N-concentration in green leaves, high N-concentration in senesced leaves and low N-resorption from senescing leaves. In contrast, fast-growing perennial grasses showed high N-concentration in green leaves, low N-concentration in senesced leaves, and high N-resorption from senescing leaves. In evergreen shrubs, the maintenance of long-lasting green leaves with low N-concentration was the most important mechanism of N conservation. In contrast, perennial grasses conserved N through high N-resorption from senescing leaves. Soil-N concentration, potential N-mineralisation, and microbial-N flush in the soil were higher underneath evergreen shrubs than beneath perennial grasses. Observed differences, however, were lower than expected considering the quality of the organic matter supplied by each plant fuctional group to the soil. A possible reason for this relatively weak trend may be the capacity of evergreen shrubs to slow down N cycling through low leaf turnover and the presence of secondary compounds in leaves. Alternatively or simultaneously, the weak relationship between plant and soil N could result from shrubs being able to colonise N-poor soils while grasses may preferably occupy fertile microsites previously influenced by the decomposition pathway of evergreen shrubs. Differences between evergreen shrubs and perennial grasses in the mechanisms of plant N-conservation and in components of N cycling in the underlying soil were consistent over the three years of the study with differing precipitation. Inter-annual differences in N concentration in green leaves and in the microbial-N flush in soil indicate that during the wettest year fast-growing perennial grasses would outcompete slow-growing evergreen shrubs and microorganisms for N uptake.
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