Abstract

Soil organic matter is an important pool of carbon and nutrients in tropical forests. The majority of this pool is assumed to be relatively stable and to turn over slowly over decades to centuries, although changes in nutrient status can influence soil organic matter on shorter timescales. We measured carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus concentrations in soil organic matter and leaf litter over an annual cycle in a long-term nutrient addition experiment in lowland tropical rain forest in the Republic of Panama. Total soil carbon was not affected by a decade of factorial combinations of nitrogen, phosphorus, or potassium. Nitrogen addition increased leaf litter nitrogen concentration by 7 % but did not affect total soil nitrogen. Phosphorus addition doubled the leaf litter phosphorus concentration and increased soil organic phosphorus by 50 %. Surprisingly, concentrations of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus in soil organic matter declined markedly during the four-month dry season, and then recovered rapidly during the following wet season. Between the end of the wet season and the late dry season, total soil carbon declined by 16 %, total nitrogen by 9 %, and organic phosphorus by between 19 % in control plots and 25 % in phosphorus addition plots. The decline in carbon and nitrogen was too great to be explained by changes in litter fall, bulk density, or the soil microbial biomass. However, a major proportion of the dry-season decline in soil organic phosphorus was explained by a corresponding decline in the soil microbial biomass. These results have important implications for our understanding of the stability and turnover of organic matter in tropical forest soils, because they demonstrate that a considerable fraction of the soil organic matter is seasonally transient, despite the overall pool being relatively insensitive to long-term changes in nutrient status.

Highlights

  • Soil organic matter plays a fundamental role in the nutrition of tropical forests

  • Soil organic matter represents an enormous reservoir of carbon (C), accounting for approximately half of the total C stock in tropical forests and almost 30 % of the total soil C stock in forests worldwide (Dixon et al 1994; Pan et al 2011)

  • Given the uncertainties about (i) seasonal patterns of soil organic matter and (ii) the response of soil organic matter to long-term perturbations in nutrient cycles in lowland tropical forests, we examined how the concentrations of C, N, and P in leaf litter fall and soil organic matter varied throughout an annual cycle in a long-term fertilization experiment in lowland tropical forest

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Summary

Introduction

Soil organic matter plays a fundamental role in the nutrition of tropical forests. The addition of N for several years to tropical forests in Puerto Rico increased soil organic C stocks, primarily in the mineral-associated pool (Cusack et al 2011). Such changes are of potential significance given the magnitude of the soil C stock in tropical forests, because even small changes in soil organic C could exert a considerable influence on atmospheric CO2 concentrations and future climate

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