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Decomposing stumps influence carbon and nitrogen pools and fine-root distribution in soils
Authors:Eric B Sucre  Thomas R Fox
Institution:1. Weyerhaeuser Company, 1785 Weyerhaeuser Rd., Vanceboro, NC 28586, United States;2. Virginia Tech, Department of Forestry, 228 Cheatham Hall, Blacksburg, VA 24061, United States
Abstract:Decomposing stumps could significantly increase soil resource heterogeneity in forest ecosystems. However, the impact of these microsites on nutrient retention and cycling is relatively unknown. Stump soil was defined as the soil fraction directly altered by the decomposition of the primary rooting system (e.g. taproots) and aboveground stumps. Study sites were located in mature hardwood stands within the Jefferson National Forest in the Ridge and Valley Physiographic region of southwest Virginia. The objectives of this study were to: (i) determine the total soil volume altered by the decomposition of stumps and underlying root system, (ii) compare and contrast total C and N, extractable ammonium (NH4+) and nitrate (NO3), potentially mineralizable N, microbial biomass C (MBC), root length and root surface area between the bulk soil (i.e. O, A, B and C horizons) and stump soil and (iii) evaluate how nutrient concentrations and fine-root dynamics change as stumps decompose over time using a categorical decay class system for stumps. Potentially mineralizable N was 2.5 times greater in stump soil than the A horizon (103 mg kg−1 vs. 39 mg kg−1), 2.7 times greater for extractable NH4+ (16 mg kg−1 vs. 6 mg kg−1) and almost 4 times greater for MBC (1528 mg kg−1 vs. 397 mg kg−1). Approximately 19% of the total fine-root length and 14% of fine-root surface area occurred in the stump soil. Significant differences occurred in C and N concentrations between all four decay classes and the mineral soil. This validated the use of this system and the need to calculate weighted averages based on the frequency and soil volume influenced by each decay class. In this forest ecosystem, approximately 1.2% of the total soil volume was classified as stump soil and contained 10% and 4% of soil C and N. This study illustrates that including stump soil in soil nutrient budgets by decay class will increase the accuracy of ecosystem nutrient budgets.
Keywords:Nutrient availability  Soil heterogeneity  Nutrient budgets  Decomposing stumps
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