Basin-wide variations in Amazon forest nitrogen-cycling characteristics as inferred from plant and soil 15N:14N measurements

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Nardoto, Gabriela B.;Quesada, Carlos A.;Patiño, Sandra;Saiz, Gustavo;Baker, Tim R.;Schwarz, Michael;Schrodt, Franziska;Feldpausch, Ted R.;Domingues, Thomas F.;Marimon, Beatriz S.;Marimon, Ben-Hur;Vieira, Ima C.G.;Silveira, Marcos;Bird, Michael I.;Phillips, Oliver L.;Lloyd, Jon;Martinelli, Luiz A.
Abstract

Background: Patterns in tropical forest nitrogen cycling are poorly understood. In particular, the extent to which leguminous trees in these forests fix nitrogen is unclear. Aims: We aimed to determine factors that explain variation in foliar δ15N (δ15NF) for Amazon forest trees, and to evaluate the extent to which putatively N2-fixing Fabaceae acquire nitrogen from the atmosphere. Methods: Upper-canopy δ15NF values were determined for 1255 trees sampled across 65 Amazon forest plots. Along with plot inventory data, differences in δ15NF between nodule-forming Fabaceae and other trees were used to estimate the extent of N2 fixation. Results: δ15NF ranged from −12.1‰ to +9.3‰. Most of this variation was attributable to site-specific conditions, with extractable soil phosphorus and dry-season precipitation having strong influences, suggesting a restricted availability of nitrogen on both young and old soils and/or at low precipitation. Fabaceae constituted fewer than 10% of the sampled trees, and only 36% were expressed fixers. We estimated an average Amazon forest symbiotic fixation rate of 3 kg N ha−1 year−1. Conclusion: Plant δ15N indicate that low levels of nitrogen availability are only likely to influence Amazon forest function on immature or old weathered soils and/or where dry-season precipitation is low. Most Fabaceae species that are capable of nodulating do not fix nitrogen in Amazonia.

Journal

Plant Ecology and Diversity

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Volume

7

ISBN/ISSN

1755-0874

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Issue

1-2

Pages Count

15

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Publisher

Taylor & Francis

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DOI

10.1080/17550874.2013.807524