Microbial nitrogen dynamics in organic and mineral soil horizons along a latitudinal transect in western Siberia


Autoria(s): Wild, Birgit; Schnecker, Joerg; Knoltsch, Anna; Takriti, Mounir; Mooshammer, Maria; Gentsch, Norman; Mikutta, Robert; Alves, Ricardo J. Eloy; Gittel, Antje; Lashchinskiy, Nikolay; Richter, Andreas
Data(s)

01/05/2015

Resumo

Soil N availability is constrained by the breakdown of N-containing polymers such as proteins to oligopeptides and amino acids that can be taken up by plants and microorganisms. Excess N is released from microbial cells as ammonium (N mineralization), which in turn can serve as substrate for nitrification. According to stoichiometric theory, N mineralization and nitrification are expected to increase in relation to protein depolymerization with decreasing N limitation, and thus from higher to lower latitudes and from topsoils to subsoils. To test these hypotheses, we compared gross rates of protein depolymerization, N mineralization and nitrification (determined using N-15 pool dilution assays) in organic topsoil, mineral topsoil, and mineral subsoil of seven ecosystems along a latitudinal transect in western Siberia, from tundra (67 degrees N) to steppe (54 degrees N). The investigated ecosystems differed strongly in N transformation rates, with highest protein depolymerization and N mineralization rates in middle and southern taiga. All N transformation rates decreased with soil depth following the decrease in organic matter content. Related to protein depolymerization, N mineralization and nitrification were significantly higher in mineral than in organic horizons, supporting a decrease in microbial N limitation with depth. In contrast, we did not find indications for a decrease in microbial N limitation from arctic to temperate ecosystems along the transect. Our findings thus challenge the perception of ubiquitous N limitation at high latitudes, but suggest a transition from N to C limitation of microorganisms with soil depth, even in high-latitude systems such as tundra and boreal forest.

Identificador

http://dx.doi.org/10.15488/483

http://www.repo.uni-hannover.de/handle/123456789/507

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Washington : Amer Geophysical Union

Relação

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2015GB005084

ISSN:0886-6236

ESSN:1944-9224

Direitos

CC-BY 4.0

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

frei zugänglich

Fonte

Global biogeochemical cycles 29 (2015), Nr. 5

Palavras-Chave #tundra #permafrost #boreal forest #protein depolymerization #arctic tundra #terrestrial ecosystems #carbon availability #forest ecosystems #alaskan tundra #use efficiency #plant-growth #n uptake #permafrost #matter #ddc:500 #ddc:570 #ddc:540
Tipo

status-type:publishedVersion

doc-type:article

doc-type:Text