Titel
Amino acid production exceeds plant nitrogen demand in Siberian tundra
Autor*in
Jiři Bárta
Department of Ecosystem Biology, University of South Bohemia
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Abstract
Arctic plant productivity is often limited by low soil N availability. This has been attributed to slow breakdown of N-containing polymers in litter and soil organic matter (SOM) into smaller, available units, and to shallow plant rooting constrained by permafrost and high soil moisture. Using 15N pool dilution assays, we here quantified gross amino acid and ammonium production rates in 97 active layer samples from four sites across the Siberian Arctic. We found that amino acid production in organic layers alone exceeded literature-based estimates of maximum plant N uptake 17-fold and therefore reject the hypothesis that arctic plant N limitation results from slow SOM breakdown. High microbial N use efficiency in organic layers rather suggests strong competition of microorganisms and plants in the dominant rooting zone. Deeper horizons showed lower amino acid production rates per volume, but also lower microbial N use efficiency. Permafrost thaw together with soil drainage might facilitate deeper plant rooting and uptake of previously inaccessible subsoil N, and thereby promote plant productivity in arctic ecosystems. We conclude that changes in microbial decomposer activity, microbial N utilization and plant root density with soil depth interactively control N availability for plants in the Arctic.
Stichwort
permafrosttundraprotein depolymerizationnitrogen mineralizationnitrogen limitationplant productivity
Objekt-Typ
Sprache
Englisch [eng]
Persistent identifier
https://phaidra.univie.ac.at/o:1032854
Erschienen in
Titel
Environmental Research Letters
Band
13
Ausgabe
3
Seitenanfang
034002
Verlag
IOP Publishing
Erscheinungsdatum
2018
Zugänglichkeit
Rechteangabe
© 2018 The Author(s)

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