Abstract

Shrub growth has increased across the Arctic in recent decades and is strongly limited by soil nitrogen (N) availability. In order to understand the role of N in controlling shrub growth, we compared N-cycling in tall birch (Betula glandulosa) and surrounding dwarf birch hummock vegetation on similar soils in a Canadian low arctic site. Stable isotope tracer analysis revealed N pools and cycling rates were ∼3 times larger and faster in the tall birch ecosystem in the late growing season, just prior to leaf senescence. Gross NH4 + -N production rates in these ecosystems correlated positively with larger pools and production rates of dissolved soil C and N, higher quality litter inputs and lower soil C. Analyses of the soil microbial community in both ecosystems indicat- ed similar fungal dominance (epifluorescence micros- copy) and similar compositions of the principal fungal or bacterial phylotypes (denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis). Together, these results strongly sug- gest that vegetation feedbacks associated with larger inputs of higher quality litter promote rapid soil N- cycling and enhanced shrub growth in tall birch tundra. We conclude that these litter-related feedbacks during summer may be as important as snow-shrub feedbacks in maintaining and promoting differences in shrub growth across the arctic landscape.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call