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Foliar and soil concentrations and stoichiometry of nitrogen and phosphorous across <scp>E</scp> uropean <scp>P</scp> inus sylvestris forests: relationships with climate, <scp>N</scp> deposition and tree growth

Authors :
Marcos Fernández-Martínez
Stavros Vereseglou
Jofre Carnicer
Matthias C. Rillig
Jordi Sardans
Tanja G. M. Sanders
Ivan A. Janssens
Rocío Alonso
Josep Peñuelas
Source :
Functional Ecology. 30:676-689
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Wiley, 2015.

Abstract

1. This study investigated the factors underlying the variability of needle and soil elemental composition and stoichiometry and their relationships with growth in Pinus sylvestris forests throughout the species&#39; distribution in Europe by analyzing data from 2245 forest stands. 2. Needle N concentrations and N:P ratios were positively correlated with total atmospheric N deposition, whereas needle P concentrations were negatively correlated. These relationships were especially pronounced at sites where high levels of N deposition coincided with both higher mean annual temperature and higher mean annual precipitation. Trends toward foliar P deficiency were thus more marked when high N deposition coincided with climatic conditions favorable to plant production. 3. Atmospheric N deposition was positively correlated with soil-solution NO3-, SO42-, K+, P, and Ca2+ concentrations, the soil-solution NO3-:P ratio, total soil N, and the total soil N:Olsen P ratio, and negatively correlated with soil Olsen P concentration. 4. Despite these nutrient imbalances, during the period studied (1990-2006), N deposition was positively related with Pinus sylvestris absolute basal diameter (BD) growth, although only accounting for the 10% of the total variance. However, neither N deposition nor needle N concentration were related with relative annual BD growth. In contrast, needle P concentration was positively related with both absolute and relative annual BD growth. 5. These results thus indicate a tendency of European P. sylvestris forests to store N in trees and soil in response to N deposition and unveil a trend toward increased nutrient losses in runoff as a consequence of higher soil-solution N concentrations. Overall, the data show increasing ecosystem nutrient imbalances with increasingly limiting roles of P and other nutrients such as K in European P. sylvestris forests, especially in the center of their distribution where higher levels of N deposition are observed. Thus, although the data show that N deposition has had an overall positive effect on P. sylvestris growth, the effect of continuous N deposition, associated with decreasing P and K and increasing N:P in leaves and in soil, may in the future become detrimental for the growth and competitive ability of P. Sylvestris trees.

Details

ISSN :
13652435 and 02698463
Volume :
30
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Functional Ecology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8ae2cfe6970103e2bb228039e3695c97
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/1365-2435.12541