Subantarctic Macquarie Island - a model ecosystem for studying animal-derived nitrogen sources using N-15 natural abundance


Autoria(s): Erskine, PD; Bergstrom, DM; Schmidt, S; Stewart, GR; Tweedie, CE; Shaw, JD
Data(s)

01/01/1998

Resumo

Plants collected from diverse sites on subantarctic Macquarie Island varied by up to 30 parts per thousand in their leaf delta(15)N values. N-15 natural abundance of plants, soils, animal excrement and atmospheric ammonia suggest that the majority of nitrogen utilised by plants growing in the vicinity of animal colonies or burrows is animal-derived. Plants growing near scavengers and animal higher in the food chain had highly enriched delta(15)N values (mean = 12.9 parts per thousand), reflecting the highly enriched signature of these animals' excrement, while plants growing near nesting penguins and albatross, which have an intermediate food chain position, had less enriched delta(15)N values (> 6 parts per thousand). Vegetation in areas affected by rabbits had lower delta(15)N values (mean = 1.2 parts per thousand), while the highly depleted delta(15)N values (below -5 parts per thousand) of plants at upland plateau sites inland of penguin colonies, suggested that a portion of their nitrogen is derived from ammonia (mean N-15 = -10 parts per thousand) lost during the degradation of penguin guano. Vegetation in a remote area had delta(15)N values near -2 parts per thousand. These results contrast with arctic and subarctic studies that attribute large variations in plant N-15 values to nitrogen partitioning in nitrogen-limited environments. Here, plant N-15 reflects the N-15 Of the likely nitrogen sources utilised by plants.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:35235

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #Ecology #Animal-derived Nitrogen #Plant Nitrogen Sources #Subantarctic #Aerial Nitrogen Deposition #N-15 Natural Abundance #Southern Elephant Seals #Arctic Plants #Ecological Implications #Atmospheric Ammonia #Seabird Rookeries #Mirounga-leonina #Soil-nitrogen #Penguin #Deposition #Carbon
Tipo

Journal Article