Do Nutrient Limitation Patterns Shift from Nitrogen Toward Phosphorus with Increasing Nitrogen Deposition Across the Northeastern United States?

被引:1
作者
K. F. Crowley
B. E. McNeil
G. M. Lovett
C. D. Canham
C. T. Driscoll
L. E. Rustad
E. Denny
R. A. Hallett
M. A. Arthur
J. L. Boggs
C. L. Goodale
J. S. Kahl
S. G. McNulty
S. V. Ollinger
L. H. Pardo
P. G. Schaberg
J. L. Stoddard
M. P. Weand
K. C. Weathers
机构
[1] Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies,Department of Geology & Geography
[2] West Virginia University,Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering
[3] Syracuse University,Northern Research Station
[4] USDA Forest Service,Department of Forestry
[5] USA National Phenology Network,Eastern Forest Environmental Threat Assessment Center
[6] University of Kentucky,Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology
[7] USDA Forest Service,Complex Systems Research Center
[8] Cornell University,Northern Research Station
[9] James W. Sewall Company,Western Ecology Division
[10] University of New Hampshire,Department of Biology
[11] USDA Forest Service,undefined
[12] University of Vermont,undefined
[13] US Environmental Protection Agency,undefined
[14] Southern Polytechnic State University,undefined
来源
Ecosystems | 2012年 / 15卷
关键词
nutrient limitation; nitrogen deposition; phosphorus; northeastern US; forest; lake; Adirondacks;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition is altering biogeochemical cycling in forests and interconnected lakes of the northeastern US, and may shift nutrient limitation from N toward other essential elements, such as phosphorus (P). Whether this shift is occurring relative to N deposition gradients across the northeastern US has not been investigated. We used datasets for the northeastern US and the Adirondack sub-region to evaluate whether P limitation is increasing where N deposition is high at two geographic scales, based on N:P mass ratios. Using a model-selection approach, we determined that foliar N for dominant tree species and lake dissolved inorganic N (DIN) increased coincident with increasing N deposition, independent of relationships between foliar N or lake DIN and precipitation or temperature. Foliar P also increased with N deposition across the northeastern US for seven of eight deciduous species, but changed less across the Adirondacks. Foliar N:P therefore declined at the highest levels of N deposition for most deciduous species across the region (remaining nearly constant for most conifers and increasing only for black cherry and hemlock), but increased across all species in the Adirondacks. Ratios between DIN and total P (DIN:TP) in lakes were unrelated to N deposition regionally but increased across the Adirondacks. Thus, nutrient limitation patterns shifted from N toward P for dominant trees, and further toward P for predominantly P-limited lakes, at the sub-regional but not regional scale. For the northeastern US overall, accumulated N deposition may be insufficient to drive nutrient limitation from N toward P; alternatively, elements other than P (for example, calcium, magnesium) may become limiting as N accumulates. The consistent Adirondack foliar and lake response could provide early indication of shifts toward P limitation within the northeastern US, and together with regional patterns, suggests that foliar chemistry could be a predictor of lake chemistry in the context of N deposition across the region.
引用
收藏
页码:940 / 957
页数:17
相关论文
共 369 条
[31]  
Stoddard JL(1998)Responses of For Ecol Manage 101 37-55
[32]  
Richer E(2004) canopy trees and saplings to P, K and lime additions under high N deposition New Phytol 164 243-266
[33]  
Bedison JE(2008)Nutrient limitation in soils exhibiting differing nitrogen availabilities: what lies beyond nitrogen saturation? Nature 454 U327-U334
[34]  
McNeil BE(1971)Impact of nitrogen deposition on nitrogen cycling in forests: a synthesis of NITREX data Plant Soil 35 623-633
[35]  
Bergstrom AK(2002)N:P ratios in terrestrial plants: variation and functional significance Atmos Environ 36 1051-1062
[36]  
Boggs JL(2005)A unifying framework for dinitrogen fixation in the terrestrial biosphere Biogeochemistry 72 283-314
[37]  
McNulty SG(1996)Effects of the chemical environment on yellow-birch root development and top growth J Appl Ecol 33 1441-1450
[38]  
Gavazzi MJ(2009)Spatial patterns of precipitation quantity and chemistry and air temperature in the Adirondack region of New York Ecol Appl 19 1454-1466
[39]  
Myers JM(2011)Nitrogen input–output budgets for lake-containing watersheds in the Adirondack region of New York Ecosystems 14 615-631
[40]  
Boggs JL(2000)The vegetation N:P ratio: a new tool to detect the nature of nutrient limitation Ecol Appl 10 73-84