Monday, 7 November 2005 - 9:45 AM
85-4

Nutrient Cycling along a Three Million Year Old Soil Chronosequence in a Semi-Arid Woodland.

Paul C. Selmants and Stephen C. Hart. Northern Arizona University, School of Forestry, PO Box 15018, Flagstaff, AZ 86011-5018

We have established a soil-age gradient spanning 1 to 3,000 ky in northern Arizona, USA. The climate along this chronosequence is semi-arid (MAAT = 10.8 oC and MAP = 280 mm), and piņon (Pinus edulis) and one-seed juniper (Juniperus monosperma) trees dominate the open woodland overstory. All soils are derived from basaltic cinders. Chronosequence studies in more humid ecosystems suggest that C and N storage increase during early stages of soil formation, but a shift from N- to P-limitation combined with increases in the crystallinity of clays lead to a decline in C and N storage late in ecosystem development. Changes in total C and N storage in the semi-arid chronosequence was consistent with this prediction. Experimental water, N, and P additions to the grass-dominated, intercanopy spaces demonstrated a combined water and N limitation to understory plant growth at the 55 ky site, no water, N, or P limitation at the 750 ky site, and a P limitation to plant growth at the 3,000 ky site. We expected that differences in C and N content between soils under tree canopies and in the intercanopy spaces would lessen with time because of changes in tree distribution on the landscape. However, we found that soil total C and N were higher under tree canopies than in the intercanopy spaces across the entire chronosequence, with the smallest differences among canopy types occurring at the 55 ky site. Both soil total δ15N and foliar δ15N of the two dominant tree species became more enriched across the chronosequence, indicating an increased rate of N loss with soil age. Our results suggest that the trajectories of C, N, and P cycling with soil development are fundamentally similar in semi-arid and humid environments despite large differences in organic matter decomposition and mineral weathering rates.

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