Abstract

Abies pinsapo fir forests are remnant of temperate-like coniferous forests currently subjected to the typical seasonal constraints of Mediterranean-type climates. We have examined for the first time, P availability and cycling in A. pinsapo forests from southern Spain by using both, measurements of concentrations of soil P fractions (resin extractable P, bicarbonate extractable P and NaOH extractable P) and rates of P supply to (P solubilization, P mineralization and phosphomonoesterases (PMEase activity) and P immobilization from the soil solution. Soils from A. pinsapo stands differing in lithology (serpentinitic and calcareous substrates) and successional status (from young-agradative to old-growth stages) were chosen for this study. Labile organic P fractions, PMEase activity and rates of P gross mineralization and immobilization were significantly higher in agradative stands on serpentines than in successionally comparable calcareous stands. This suggests an important role of the organic P subcycle in the A. pinsapo stand on serpentine. On calcareous lithology, PMEase activity and all soil P transformation rates significantly increased throughout the successional series. Similarly, all organic and inorganic P fractions measured in old-growth forests showed the maximum values of the series. These trends fit the predictions of standard patterns of P cycling changes along with succession, in which P supply to plants greatly depends on solubilization from mineral forms at early-to-mid successional stages, whereas the importance of processes related to the organic P subcycle increases as succession progresses.

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