Context-dependent tree species effects on soil nitrogen transformations and related microbial functional genes

Relena Rose Ribbons, Sebastian Kepfer Rojas, Chatchai Kosawang, Ole Kim Hansen, Per Lennart Ambus, Morag McDonald, Sue J. Grayston, Cindy E. Prescott, Lars Vesterdal

13 Citationer (Scopus)
71 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Although it is generally accepted that tree species can influence nutrient cycling processes in soils, effects are not consistently found, nor are the mechanisms behind tree species effects well understood. Our objectives were to gain insights into the mechanism(s) underlying the effects of tree species on soil nitrogen cycling processes, and to determine the consistency of tree species effects across sites. We compared N cycling in soils beneath six tree species (ash, sycamore maple, lime, beech, pedunculate oak, Norway spruce) in common garden experiments planted 42 years earlier at three sites in Denmark with distinct land-use histories (forest and agriculture). We measured: (1) net and gross rates of N transformations using the 15N isotope pool-dilution method, (2) soil microbial community composition through qPCR of fungal ITS, bacterial and archaeal 16S, and (3) abundance of functional genes associated with N cycling processes—for nitrification the archaeal and bacterial ammonia-monooxygenase genes (amoA AOA and amoA AOB, respectively) and for denitrification, the nitrate reductase genes nirK and nirS. Carbon concentrations were higher in soils under spruce than under broadleaves, so N transformation rates were standardized per g soil C. Soil NH4 + parameters (gross ammonification, gross NH4 + consumption, net ammonification (net immobilization in this case), and NH4 + concentrations, per g C) were all lowest in soils under spruce. Soils under spruce also had the lowest gene abundance of bacteria, bacterial:fungal ratio, denitrifying microorganisms, ammonia-oxidizing archaea and ammonia-oxidizing bacteria. Differences in N-cycling processes and organisms among the five broadleaf species were smaller. The ‘spruce effect’ on soil microbes and N transformations appeared to be driven by its acidifying effect on soil and tighter N cycling, which occurred at the previously forested sites but not at the previously agricultural site. We conclude that existing characteristics of soils, including those resulting from previous land use, mediate the effects of tree species on the soil microbial communities and activities that determine rates of N-cycling processes.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftBiogeochemistry
Vol/bind140
Udgave nummer2
Sider (fra-til)145-160
Antal sider1
ISSN0168-2563
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 1 sep. 2018

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