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Net and gross mineral N production rates at three levels of forest canopy retention: evidence that NH4+ and NO3 dynamics are uncoupled
Authors:Robert L. Bradley  William F. J. Parsons
Affiliation:(1) Département de Biologie, Université de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Québec, J1K2R1, Canada
Abstract:Alternative silvicultural systems were introduced in Coastal Western Hemlock forests of British Columbia, Canada, to reduce disturbance incurred by conventional clear-cutting and to maintain the forest influence on soil nutrient cycling. As we hypothesized, in situ pools and net mineralization of NH4 + were lower under no and low disturbance (old-growth forest and shelterwood) compared to clear-cuts (high disturbance); in situ pools and net production of NO3 were very low across all treatments. Gross transformation rates of NH4 + increased while those of NO3 decreased with increasing disturbance, suggesting that these processes were uncoupled. We conclude that shelterwood harvesting reduces the impact on forest floor NH4 + cycling compared to clear-cutting, and that neither low nor high disturbance intensity results in substantial NO3 accumulation, as what occasionally occurs in other ecosystems. We hypothesize that the uncoupling of NH4 + and NO3 dynamics may be due to the predominance of heterotrophic nitrification by lignin-degrading fungi that oxidize organic N rather than NH4 +–N, and whose activities are suppressed at high NH4 + concentrations.
Keywords:Coastal Western Hemlock  Clear-cutting  Nitrogen mineralization   15N pool dilution  Shelterwood harvesting
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