The effects of changes in soil moisture on nitrogen cycling in acid wetland types of the New Jersey Pinelands (USA)
نویسندگان
چکیده
Wetlands are subject to changes in soil moisture as a result of both short-term seasonal climate variations and long-term changes in regional water resource management, both of which can modify the dynamics of ground and surface water inputs. In the New Jersey Pinelands, forested wetlands that differ in both plant communities and soil structure occur along a topographic and hydrological gradient associated with an unconfined aquifer. Proposed groundwater withdrawals may affect water content of soils along this gradient. We hypothesized that prolonged changes in soil moisture would alter net nitrogen mineralization and nitrification rates in proportion to the amount of moisture change, and that these changes would be similar for the different soils along the drainage catena. Soils from two catenary sequences of wetlands, including pine-dominated (driest landscape position), hardwood-dominated, and Atlantic white-cedar-dominated (wettest landscape position) communities were used in long-term laboratory incubations (36 weeks). Production of NH4 þ–N, NO3 –N, and dissolved organic N were measured under two sets of conditions: constant moisture levels of 100%, 60% and 30% water-holding capacity (WHC), and fluctuating moisture levels (alternating 2 week periods at 100% and 30% WHC). In soils from most of the wetlands, we observed increases in net mineralization and nitrification when constant low-moisture conditions were established, but not under fluctuating conditions. Contrary to expectations, responses to the drying treatments varied between wetland types and between replicate wetlands of each type. Under constant-moisture conditions, nitrification increased more in cedar swamps than in either type of pine wetland. Under all conditions, soils from all the wetlands within one of the catenas produced more inorganic and organic soluble N than did the wetlands from the other catena, suggesting that area-wide effects are as important as wetland type in regulating production of soluble N. Within both catenas, pine-hardwood wetlands generated more soluble N under all moisture conditions than did either pine-dominated or cedar wetlands. Our results suggest that changes in soil moisture due to management of water resources will affect N cycling in wetland soils, but that the magnitude of the effects, and the potential for large releases of nitrate, will depend on the specific soil properties of affected wetlands. 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
منابع مشابه
Investigation of vegetation changes using Soil Moisture Index in Gavkhouni wetland
Gavkhouni wetland located in the center of Iranchr('39')s Plateau is one of the important habitat for native flora and fauna. The present study aimed to evaluate change trend of vegetation types and Soil Moisture Index in Gavkhouni wetland since recent 16 years. Vegetation types were identified via field visitation during 2011-2017 and the maps were generated in ArcGIS 10.5. SMI is derived us...
متن کاملCarbon mineralization in acidic, xeric forest soils: induction of new activities.
Carbon mineralization was examined in Lakehurst and Atsion sands collected from the New Jersey Pinelands and in Pahokee muck from the Everglades Agricultural Area. Objectives were (i) to estimate the carbon mineralization capacities of acidic, xeric Pinelands soils in the absence of exogenously supplied carbon substrate (nonamended carbon mineralization rate) and to compare these activities wit...
متن کاملEffects of Land Use and Land Cover changes on Soil Organic Carbon and Total Nitrogen Stocks in the Olesharo Catchment, Narok County, Kenya
Land Use and Land Cover Change (LULCC) is the most prominent cause of Soil Organic Carbon (SOC) variability in any landscape. Kenyan Arid and Semi-Arid Lands (ASALs) have been facing extensive land use/ cover changes in the last three decades prompting a review on the impacts it has on soil quality and consequently on land degradation. This study was carried out in 2016 in Olesharo Catchment, N...
متن کاملAssessing Relation of Soil Hydrophobicity and Soil Water Content and Determining Threshold Moisture of Organic Soil Samples
Soil water content is the most effective factor associated with the hydrophobic and hydrophilic changes in a soil. Water repellency in soils, is not a permanent feature; it can be reached in the dry season and reduced or eliminated in the wet season It can be said that in terms of moisture, there is a critical region that is defined as the threshold moisture content, where in lower moisture, th...
متن کاملSoil changes induced by hardwood and coniferous tree plantations establishment: Comparison with natural forest soil at Berenjestanak lowland forest in north of Iran
Increasing urbanisation and industrialisation have led to a dramatic reduction in forest area, and now only culturally protected remnants of natural forests and some new plantations remain in most areas of the north of Iran. To investigate the status of the chemical and physical characteristics of soil under these remnant forests and assess the possible impacts of reforestation on soil properti...
متن کامل