- Standardsignatur4181
- TitelRepeated freeze-thaw events affect leaching losses of nitrogen and dissolved organic matter in a forest soil
- Verfasser
- ErscheinungsortWeinheim
- Verlag
- Erscheinungsjahr2008
- SeitenS. 699-706
- Illustrationen2 Abb., 3 Tab., 37 Lit. Ang.
- MaterialArtikel aus einer ZeitschriftUnselbständiges Werk
- Datensatznummer200154063
- Quelle
- AbstractFreezing and thawing may substantially influence the rates of C and N cycling in soils, and soil frost was proposed to induce NO losses with seepage from forest ecosystems. Here, we test the hypothesis that freezing and thawing triggers N and dissolved organic matter (DOM) release from a forest soil after thawing and that low freezing temperatures enhance the effect. Undisturbed soil columns were taken from a soil at a Norway spruce site either comprising only O horizons or O horizons + mineral soil horizons. The columns were subjected to three cycles of freezing and thawing at temperatures of -3°C, -8°C, and -13°C. The control columns were kept at constant +5°C. Following the frost events, the columns were irrigated for 20 d at a rate of 4 mm d-1. Percolates were analyzed for total N, mineral N, and dissolved organic carbon (DOC). The total amount of mineral N extracted from the O horizons in the control amounted to 8.6 g N m-2 during the experimental period of 170 d. Frost reduced the amount of mineral N leached from the soil columns with -8°C and -13°C being most effective. In these treatments, only 3.1 and 4.0 g N m-2 were extracted from the O horizons. Net nitrification was more negatively affected than net ammonification. Severe soil frost increased the release of DOC from the O horizons, but the effect was only observed in the first freeze-thaw cycle. We found no evidence for lysis of microorganisms after soil frost. Our experiment did not confirm the hypothesis that soil frost increases N mineralization after thawing. The total amount of additionally released DOC was rather low in relation to the expected annual fluxes.
- Schlagwörter
- Klassifikation
Hierarchie-Browser