DISSOLVED NITROGEN, PHOSPHORUS, AND SULFUR FORMS IN THE ECOSYSTEM FLUXES OF A MONTANE FOREST IN ECUADOR

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dc.contributor.author Goller R.
dc.contributor.author Wilcke W.
dc.contributor.author Fleischbein K.
dc.contributor.author Valarezo C.
dc.contributor.author Zech W.
dc.date.accessioned 2024-09-04T09:55:50Z
dc.date.available 2024-09-04T09:55:50Z
dc.date.issued 2006
dc.identifier https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=53149704
dc.identifier.citation Biogeochemistry, 2006, 77, 1, 57-89
dc.identifier.issn 0168-2563
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/44976
dc.description.abstract The N, P, and S cycles in pristine forests are assumed to differ from those of anthropogenically impacted areas, but there are only a few studies to support this. Our objective was therefore to assess the controls of N, P, and S release, immobilization, and transport in a remote tropical montane forest. The study forest is located on steep slopes of the northern Andes in Ecuador. We determined the concentrations of NO3-N, NH4-N, dissolved organic N (DON), PO4-P, dissolved organic P (DOP), SO4-S, dissolved organic S (DOS), and dissolved organic C (DOC) in rainfall, throughfall, stemflow, lateral flow (in the organic layer), litter leachate, mineral soil solution, and stream water of three 8–13 ha catchments (1900–2200 m a.s.l.). The organic forms of N, P, and S contributed, on average, 55, 66, and 63% to the total N, P, and S concentrations in all ecosystem fluxes, respectively. The organic layer was the largest source of all N, P, and S species except for inorganic P and S. Most PO4 was released in the canopy by leaching and most SO4 in the mineral soil by weathering. The mineral soil was a sink for all studied compounds except for SO4. Consequently, concentrations of dissolved inorganic and organic N and P were as low in stream water (TDN: 0.34–0.39 mg N l−1, P not detectable) as in rainfall (TDN: 0.39–0.48 mg N l−1, P not detectable), whereas total S concentrations were elevated (stream water: 0.04–0.15, rainfall: 0.01–0.07 mg S l−1). Dissolved N, P, and S forms were positively correlated with pH at the scale of soil peda except inorganic S. Soil drying and rewetting promoted the release of dissolved inorganic N. High discharge levels following heavy rainstorms were associated with increased DOC, DON, NO3-N and partly also NH4-N concentrations in stream water. Nitrate-N concentrations in the stream water were positively correlated with stream discharge during the wetter period of the year. Our results demonstrate that the sources and sinks of N, P, and S were element-specific. More than half of the cycling N, P, and S was organic. Soil pH and moisture were important controls of N, P, and S solubility at the scale of individual soil peda whereas the flow regime influenced the export with stream water.
dc.subject BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
dc.subject DISSOLVED NUTRIENTS
dc.subject DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER
dc.subject ECOSYSTEM FLUXES
dc.subject TROPICAL MONTANE FOREST
dc.subject WATER CATCHMENTS
dc.title DISSOLVED NITROGEN, PHOSPHORUS, AND SULFUR FORMS IN THE ECOSYSTEM FLUXES OF A MONTANE FOREST IN ECUADOR
dc.type Статья
dc.identifier.doi 10.1007/s10533-005-1061-1


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