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Tree Species Traits Influence Soil Physical, Chemical, and Biological Properties in High Elevation Forests

BACKGROUND: Previous studies have shown that plants often have species-specific effects on soil properties. In high elevation forests in the Southern Rocky Mountains, North America, areas that are dominated by a single tree species are often adjacent to areas dominated by another tree species. Here,...

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Autores principales: Ayres, Edward, Steltzer, Heidi, Berg, Sarah, Wallenstein, Matthew D., Simmons, Breana L., Wall, Diana H.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2694365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19536334
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005964
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author Ayres, Edward
Steltzer, Heidi
Berg, Sarah
Wallenstein, Matthew D.
Simmons, Breana L.
Wall, Diana H.
author_facet Ayres, Edward
Steltzer, Heidi
Berg, Sarah
Wallenstein, Matthew D.
Simmons, Breana L.
Wall, Diana H.
author_sort Ayres, Edward
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Previous studies have shown that plants often have species-specific effects on soil properties. In high elevation forests in the Southern Rocky Mountains, North America, areas that are dominated by a single tree species are often adjacent to areas dominated by another tree species. Here, we assessed soil properties beneath adjacent stands of trembling aspen, lodgepole pine, and Engelmann spruce, which are dominant tree species in this region and are distributed widely in North America. We hypothesized that soil properties would differ among stands dominated by different tree species and expected that aspen stands would have higher soil temperatures due to their open structure, which, combined with higher quality litter, would result in increased soil respiration rates, nitrogen availability, and microbial biomass, and differences in soil faunal community composition. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We assessed soil physical, chemical, and biological properties at four sites where stands of aspen, pine, and spruce occurred in close proximity to one-another in the San Juan Mountains, Colorado. Leaf litter quality differed among the tree species, with the highest nitrogen (N) concentration and lowest lignin∶N in aspen litter. Nitrogen concentration was similar in pine and spruce litter, but lignin∶N was highest in pine litter. Soil temperature and moisture were highest in aspen stands, which, in combination with higher litter quality, probably contributed to faster soil respiration rates from stands of aspen. Soil carbon and N content, ammonium concentration, and microbial biomass did not differ among tree species, but nitrate concentration was highest in aspen soil and lowest in spruce soil. In addition, soil fungal, bacterial, and nematode community composition and rotifer, collembolan, and mesostigmatid mite abundance differed among the tree species, while the total abundance of nematodes, tardigrades, oribatid mites, and prostigmatid mites did not. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Although some soil characteristics were unaffected by tree species identity, our results clearly demonstrate that these dominant tree species are associated with soils that differ in several physical, chemical, and biotic properties. Ongoing environmental changes in this region, e.g. changes in fire regime, frequency of insect outbreaks, changes in precipitation patterns and snowpack, and land-use change, may alter the relative abundance of these tree species over coming decades, which in turn will likely alter the soils.
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spelling pubmed-26943652009-06-18 Tree Species Traits Influence Soil Physical, Chemical, and Biological Properties in High Elevation Forests Ayres, Edward Steltzer, Heidi Berg, Sarah Wallenstein, Matthew D. Simmons, Breana L. Wall, Diana H. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Previous studies have shown that plants often have species-specific effects on soil properties. In high elevation forests in the Southern Rocky Mountains, North America, areas that are dominated by a single tree species are often adjacent to areas dominated by another tree species. Here, we assessed soil properties beneath adjacent stands of trembling aspen, lodgepole pine, and Engelmann spruce, which are dominant tree species in this region and are distributed widely in North America. We hypothesized that soil properties would differ among stands dominated by different tree species and expected that aspen stands would have higher soil temperatures due to their open structure, which, combined with higher quality litter, would result in increased soil respiration rates, nitrogen availability, and microbial biomass, and differences in soil faunal community composition. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We assessed soil physical, chemical, and biological properties at four sites where stands of aspen, pine, and spruce occurred in close proximity to one-another in the San Juan Mountains, Colorado. Leaf litter quality differed among the tree species, with the highest nitrogen (N) concentration and lowest lignin∶N in aspen litter. Nitrogen concentration was similar in pine and spruce litter, but lignin∶N was highest in pine litter. Soil temperature and moisture were highest in aspen stands, which, in combination with higher litter quality, probably contributed to faster soil respiration rates from stands of aspen. Soil carbon and N content, ammonium concentration, and microbial biomass did not differ among tree species, but nitrate concentration was highest in aspen soil and lowest in spruce soil. In addition, soil fungal, bacterial, and nematode community composition and rotifer, collembolan, and mesostigmatid mite abundance differed among the tree species, while the total abundance of nematodes, tardigrades, oribatid mites, and prostigmatid mites did not. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Although some soil characteristics were unaffected by tree species identity, our results clearly demonstrate that these dominant tree species are associated with soils that differ in several physical, chemical, and biotic properties. Ongoing environmental changes in this region, e.g. changes in fire regime, frequency of insect outbreaks, changes in precipitation patterns and snowpack, and land-use change, may alter the relative abundance of these tree species over coming decades, which in turn will likely alter the soils. Public Library of Science 2009-06-18 /pmc/articles/PMC2694365/ /pubmed/19536334 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005964 Text en Ayres et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ayres, Edward
Steltzer, Heidi
Berg, Sarah
Wallenstein, Matthew D.
Simmons, Breana L.
Wall, Diana H.
Tree Species Traits Influence Soil Physical, Chemical, and Biological Properties in High Elevation Forests
title Tree Species Traits Influence Soil Physical, Chemical, and Biological Properties in High Elevation Forests
title_full Tree Species Traits Influence Soil Physical, Chemical, and Biological Properties in High Elevation Forests
title_fullStr Tree Species Traits Influence Soil Physical, Chemical, and Biological Properties in High Elevation Forests
title_full_unstemmed Tree Species Traits Influence Soil Physical, Chemical, and Biological Properties in High Elevation Forests
title_short Tree Species Traits Influence Soil Physical, Chemical, and Biological Properties in High Elevation Forests
title_sort tree species traits influence soil physical, chemical, and biological properties in high elevation forests
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2694365/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19536334
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0005964
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