Soil silicon dynamics following long-term litter and nutrient manipulations in a lowland tropical forest

被引:2
|
作者
Turner, Benjamin L. [1 ]
Bielnicka, Aleksandra W. [2 ]
Kim, Pil Joo [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Gyeongsang Natl Univ, Inst Agr & Life Sci, 501 Jinju Daero, Jinju 52828, South Korea
[2] Adamed Pharm SA, Ul Mariana Adamkiewicza, PL-05125 Czosnow, Poland
[3] Gyeongsang Natl Univ, Div Appl Life Sci, BK 21 Program, 501 Jinju Daero, Jinju 52828, South Korea
基金
新加坡国家研究基金会;
关键词
Soil; Plant available silicon; Tropical forest; Litter manipulation; Fertilizer experiment; Nutrient addition; Panama; Gigante Peninsula; SPATIAL VARIATIONS; AMORPHOUS SILICA; RAIN-FOREST; PHOSPHORUS; CYCLE; AVAILABILITY; CHEMISTRY; TREE; ACCUMULATION; SOLUBILITY;
D O I
10.1007/s12633-024-03019-3
中图分类号
O64 [物理化学(理论化学)、化学物理学];
学科分类号
070304 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Silicon (Si) has an important role in forest ecology, but controls on Si availability in tropical forests remain poorly understood. For example, it remains unclear to what extent recycling from litterfall maintains Si availability in the soil, or whether Si is influenced by the dynamics of other essential nutrients. To address this, we quantified soil Si pools in two long-term experiments in lowland tropical forest in Panama: (i) a litter manipulation experiment involving 15 years of litter addition and removal, and (ii) a fertilizer experiment involving 20 years of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium addition. We quantified available Si extracted in 0.01 M CaCl2, reactive pedogenic Si extracted in acidic ammonium oxalate, and biogenic Si extracted in hot 1% Na2CO3. Fifteen years of litter manipulation reduced available Si by 17% where litter was removed and increased it by 53% where litter was added. Litter addition also increased reactive pedogenic Si by 43%, but there was no change with litter removal. Twenty years of nitrogen addition reduced available Si by 22% and pedogenic Si by 25%, but there were no significant responses to the addition of phosphorus or potassium. The decline in Si with nitrogen addition appears to be related to the mobilization and leaching of available Si during soil acidification. Biogenic Si did not respond to any treatment, including long-term litter addition involving an estimated annual return of 7.64 g Si m-2 in leaf litterfall, suggesting that extraction with Na2CO3 is unsuitable for quantifying phytoliths in clay-rich tropical soils. Overall, these findings demonstrate the importance of litterfall in maintaining Si availability in tropical forests and highlight a rarely considered consequence of atmospheric nitrogen addition and associated soil acidification for the tropical Si cycle.
引用
收藏
页码:4531 / 4540
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Altered litter inputs modify carbon and nitrogen storage in soil organic matter in a lowland tropical forest
    Emma J. Sayer
    Catherine Baxendale
    Ali J. Birkett
    Laëtitia M. Bréchet
    Biancolini Castro
    Deirdre Kerdraon-Byrne
    Luis Lopez-Sangil
    Chadtip Rodtassana
    Biogeochemistry, 2021, 156 : 115 - 130
  • [42] Can Growth Form Classification Predict Litter Nutrient Dynamics and Decomposition Rates in Lowland Wet Forest?
    Santiago, Louis S.
    BIOTROPICA, 2010, 42 (01) : 72 - 79
  • [43] Seasonal changes in soil organic matter after a decade of nutrient addition in a lowland tropical forest
    Turner, Benjamin L.
    Yavitt, Joseph B.
    Harms, Kyle E.
    Garcia, Milton N.
    Joseph Wright, S.
    BIOGEOCHEMISTRY, 2015, 123 (1-2) : 221 - 235
  • [44] SOIL NUTRIENT DYNAMICS IN RESPONSE TO IRRIGATION OF A PANAMANIAN TROPICAL MOIST FOREST
    YAVITT, JB
    WIEDER, RK
    WRIGHT, SJ
    BIOGEOCHEMISTRY, 1993, 19 (01) : 1 - 25
  • [45] Disentangling the long-term effects of disturbance on soil biogeochemistry in a wet tropical forest ecosystem
    del Arroyo, Omar Gutierrez
    Silver, Whendee L.
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2018, 24 (04) : 1673 - 1684
  • [46] Long-Term Persistence of Pioneer Species in Tropical Rain Forest Soil Seed Banks
    Dalling, James W.
    Brown, Thomas A.
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2009, 173 (04): : 531 - 535
  • [47] Publisher Correction: Microbial community-level regulation explains soil carbon responses to long-term litter manipulations
    Katerina Georgiou
    Rose Z. Abramoff
    John Harte
    William J. Riley
    Margaret S. Torn
    Nature Communications, 9
  • [48] Differential responses of litter decomposition to nutrient addition and soil water availability with long-term vegetation recovery
    Zhong, Yangquanwei
    Yan, Weiming
    Wang, Ruiwu
    Shangguan, Zhouping
    BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS, 2017, 53 (08) : 939 - 949
  • [49] Differential responses of litter decomposition to nutrient addition and soil water availability with long-term vegetation recovery
    Yangquanwei Zhong
    Weiming Yan
    Ruiwu Wang
    Zhouping Shangguan
    Biology and Fertility of Soils, 2017, 53 : 939 - 949
  • [50] Impact of long-term nutrient management on sequestration and dynamics of soil organic carbon in a semi-arid tropical Alfisol of India
    Anandakumar, Selvaraj
    Bakhoum, Niokhor
    Chinnadurai, Chinnappan
    Malarkodi, Maruthan
    Arulmozhiselvan, Kothandaraman
    Karthikeyan, Subburamu
    Balachandar, Dananjeyan
    APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 2022, 177