Cold storage and laboratory incubation of intact soil cores do not reflect in-situ nitrogen cycling rates of tropical forest soils |
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Authors: | Julia Arnold Marife D. Corre Edzo Veldkamp |
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Affiliation: | aBuesgen Institute – Soil Science of Tropical and Subtropical Ecosystems, Georg-August University of Goettingen, Buesgenweg 2, 37077 Goettingen, Germany |
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Abstract: | Measurements of N transformation rates in tropical forest soils are commonly conducted in the laboratory from disturbed or intact soil cores. On four sites with Andisol soils under old-growth forests of Panama and Ecuador, we compared N transformation rates measured from laboratory incubation (at soil temperatures of the sites) of intact soil cores after a period of cold storage (at 5 °C) with measurements conducted in situ. Laboratory measurements from stored soil cores showed lower gross N mineralization and NH4+ consumption rates and higher gross nitrification and NO3− immobilization rates than the in-situ measurements. We conclude that cold storage and laboratory incubation change the soils to such an extent that N cycling rates do not reflect field conditions. The only reliable way to measure N transformation rates of tropical forest soils is in-situ incubation and mineral N extraction in the field. |
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Keywords: | Gross N mineralization Gross nitrification N immobilization 15N pool dilution Tropical forest N cycling |
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