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Nitrogen Distribution and Cycling through Water Flows in a Subtropical Bamboo Forest under High Level of Atmospheric Deposition

BACKGROUND: The hydrological cycle is an important way of transportation and reallocation of reactive nitrogen (N) in forest ecosystems. However, under a high level of atmospheric N deposition, the N distribution and cycling through water flows in forest ecosystems especially in bamboo ecosystems ar...

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Autores principales: Tu, Li-hua, Hu, Ting-xing, Zhang, Jian, Huang, Li-hua, Xiao, Yin-long, Chen, Gang, Hu, Hong-ling, Liu, Li, Zheng, Jiang-kun, Xu, Zhen-feng, Chen, Liang-hua
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3795693/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24146784
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075862
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author Tu, Li-hua
Hu, Ting-xing
Zhang, Jian
Huang, Li-hua
Xiao, Yin-long
Chen, Gang
Hu, Hong-ling
Liu, Li
Zheng, Jiang-kun
Xu, Zhen-feng
Chen, Liang-hua
author_facet Tu, Li-hua
Hu, Ting-xing
Zhang, Jian
Huang, Li-hua
Xiao, Yin-long
Chen, Gang
Hu, Hong-ling
Liu, Li
Zheng, Jiang-kun
Xu, Zhen-feng
Chen, Liang-hua
author_sort Tu, Li-hua
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The hydrological cycle is an important way of transportation and reallocation of reactive nitrogen (N) in forest ecosystems. However, under a high level of atmospheric N deposition, the N distribution and cycling through water flows in forest ecosystems especially in bamboo ecosystems are not well understood. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In order to investigate N fluxes through water flows in a Pleioblastus amarus bamboo forest, event rainfall/snowfall (precipitation, PP), throughfall (TF), stemflow (SF), surface runoff (SR), forest floor leachate (FFL), soil water at the depth of 40 cm (SW1) and 100 cm (SW2) were collected and measured through the whole year of 2009. Nitrogen distribution in different pools in this ecosystem was also measured. Mean N pools in vegetation and soil (0–1 m) were 351.7 and 7752.8 kg ha(−1). Open field nitrogen deposition at the study site was 113.8 kg N ha(−1) yr(−1), which was one of the highest in the world. N-NH(4) (+), N-NO(3) (−) and dissolved organic N (DON) accounted for 54%, 22% and 24% of total wet N deposition. Net canopy accumulated of N occurred with N-NO(3) (−) and DON but not N-NH(4) (+). The flux of total dissolved N (TDN) to the forest floor was greater than that in open field precipitation by 17.7 kg N ha(−1) yr(−1), due to capture of dry and cloudwater deposition net of canopy uptake. There were significant negative exponential relationships between monthly water flow depths and monthly mean TDN concentrations in PP, TF, SR, FFL and SW1. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The open field nitrogen deposition through precipitation is very high over the world, which is the main way of reactive N input in this bamboo ecosystem. The water exchange and N consume mainly occurred in the litter floor layer and topsoil layer, where most of fine roots of bamboo distributed.
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spelling pubmed-37956932013-10-21 Nitrogen Distribution and Cycling through Water Flows in a Subtropical Bamboo Forest under High Level of Atmospheric Deposition Tu, Li-hua Hu, Ting-xing Zhang, Jian Huang, Li-hua Xiao, Yin-long Chen, Gang Hu, Hong-ling Liu, Li Zheng, Jiang-kun Xu, Zhen-feng Chen, Liang-hua PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The hydrological cycle is an important way of transportation and reallocation of reactive nitrogen (N) in forest ecosystems. However, under a high level of atmospheric N deposition, the N distribution and cycling through water flows in forest ecosystems especially in bamboo ecosystems are not well understood. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: In order to investigate N fluxes through water flows in a Pleioblastus amarus bamboo forest, event rainfall/snowfall (precipitation, PP), throughfall (TF), stemflow (SF), surface runoff (SR), forest floor leachate (FFL), soil water at the depth of 40 cm (SW1) and 100 cm (SW2) were collected and measured through the whole year of 2009. Nitrogen distribution in different pools in this ecosystem was also measured. Mean N pools in vegetation and soil (0–1 m) were 351.7 and 7752.8 kg ha(−1). Open field nitrogen deposition at the study site was 113.8 kg N ha(−1) yr(−1), which was one of the highest in the world. N-NH(4) (+), N-NO(3) (−) and dissolved organic N (DON) accounted for 54%, 22% and 24% of total wet N deposition. Net canopy accumulated of N occurred with N-NO(3) (−) and DON but not N-NH(4) (+). The flux of total dissolved N (TDN) to the forest floor was greater than that in open field precipitation by 17.7 kg N ha(−1) yr(−1), due to capture of dry and cloudwater deposition net of canopy uptake. There were significant negative exponential relationships between monthly water flow depths and monthly mean TDN concentrations in PP, TF, SR, FFL and SW1. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: The open field nitrogen deposition through precipitation is very high over the world, which is the main way of reactive N input in this bamboo ecosystem. The water exchange and N consume mainly occurred in the litter floor layer and topsoil layer, where most of fine roots of bamboo distributed. Public Library of Science 2013-10-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3795693/ /pubmed/24146784 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075862 Text en © 2013 Tu 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
Tu, Li-hua
Hu, Ting-xing
Zhang, Jian
Huang, Li-hua
Xiao, Yin-long
Chen, Gang
Hu, Hong-ling
Liu, Li
Zheng, Jiang-kun
Xu, Zhen-feng
Chen, Liang-hua
Nitrogen Distribution and Cycling through Water Flows in a Subtropical Bamboo Forest under High Level of Atmospheric Deposition
title Nitrogen Distribution and Cycling through Water Flows in a Subtropical Bamboo Forest under High Level of Atmospheric Deposition
title_full Nitrogen Distribution and Cycling through Water Flows in a Subtropical Bamboo Forest under High Level of Atmospheric Deposition
title_fullStr Nitrogen Distribution and Cycling through Water Flows in a Subtropical Bamboo Forest under High Level of Atmospheric Deposition
title_full_unstemmed Nitrogen Distribution and Cycling through Water Flows in a Subtropical Bamboo Forest under High Level of Atmospheric Deposition
title_short Nitrogen Distribution and Cycling through Water Flows in a Subtropical Bamboo Forest under High Level of Atmospheric Deposition
title_sort nitrogen distribution and cycling through water flows in a subtropical bamboo forest under high level of atmospheric deposition
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3795693/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24146784
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075862
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