Abstract

Tropical montane forests are commonly limited by N or co-limited by N and P. Projected increases in N deposition in tropical montane regions are thought to be insufficient for vegetation demand and are not therefore expected to affect soil N availability and N2O emissions. We established a factorial N- and P-addition experiment (i.e., N, P, N + P, and control) across an elevation gradient of montane forests in Ecuador to test these hypotheses: (1) moderate rates of N and P additions are able to stimulate soil-N cycling rates and N2O fluxes, and (2) the magnitude and timing of soil N2O-flux responses depend on the initial nutrient status of the forest soils. Moderate rates of nutrients were added: 50 kg N ha−1 year−1 (in the form of urea) and 10 kg P ha−1 year−1 (in the form of NaH2PO 4 . 2H2O) split in two equal applications. We tested the hypotheses by measuring changes in net rates of soil–N cycling and N2O fluxes during the first 2 years (2008–2009) of nutrient manipulation in an old-growth premontane forest at 1,000 m, growing on a Cambisol soil with no organic layer, in an old-growth lower montane forest at 2,000 m, growing on a Cambisol soil with an organic layer, and an old-growth upper montane rainforest at 3,000 m, growing on a Histosol soil with a thick organic layer. Among the control plots, net nitrification rates were largest at the 1,000-m site whereas net nitrification was not detectable at the 2,000- and 3,000-m sites. The already large net nitrification at the 1,000-m site was not affected by nutrient additions, but net nitrification became detectable at the 2,000- and 3000-m sites after the second year of N and N + P additions. N2O emissions increased rapidly following N and N + P additions at the 1,000-m site whereas only smaller increases occurred at the 2,000- and 3,000-m sites during the second year of N and N + P additions. Addition of P alone had no effect on net rates of soil N cycling and N2O fluxes at any elevation. Our results showed that the initial soil N status, which may also be influenced by presence or absence of organic layer, soil moisture and temperature as encompassed by the elevation gradient, is a good indicator of how soil N cycling and N2O fluxes may respond to future increases in nutrient additions.

Highlights

  • One third of terrestrial net primary production (NPP) is generated by tropical forests (Field et al 1998; Malhi and Phillips 2004) and their soils are the largest natural source of nitrous oxide (N2O) globally, produced by the microbial processes of nitrification and denitrification (IPCC 2007)

  • Our results showed that the initial soil N status, which may be influenced by presence or absence of organic layer, soil moisture and temperature as encompassed by the elevation gradient, is a good indicator of how soil N cycling and N2O fluxes may respond to future increases in nutrient additions

  • Net N mineralization rates did not differ across the elevation gradient and net nitrification rates were only detectable at the 1,000-m site (Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

One third of terrestrial net primary production (NPP) is generated by tropical forests (Field et al 1998; Malhi and Phillips 2004) and their soils are the largest natural source of nitrous oxide (N2O) globally (approximately 4.4 Tg N year-1), produced by the microbial processes of nitrification and denitrification (IPCC 2007). Most tropical montane forests grow on younger soils due to recurrence of substrate addition and removal (e.g. erosion and slope processes) and are thought to be N limited or simultaneously N and P limited (Tanner et al 1998). This conceptual soil–age nutrient limitation model was validated by field studies where increased NPP was observed following N and in some cases P additions to tropical montane forests (Adamek et al 2009; Tanner et al 1990, 1992; Vitousek et al 1993). Soil N availability (measured as gross rates of soil-N cycling) increases across an increasing soil–age gradient in Hawaiian montane forests (Hall and Matson 2003) and decreases across an increasing elevation gradient in Ecuadorian forests, which depicts a decreasing degree of soil development and decreasing temperatures (Arnold et al 2009)

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