Wednesday, November 15, 2006
298-7

N-Contribution of Legumes Native to the Longleaf Pine-Wiregrass Ecosystem.

Sarah E. Cathey, Univ of Florida, IFAS Agronomy, 2005 SW 23rd St, PO Box 110965, Gainesville, FL 32611, Lindsay Boring, J.W. Jones Ecological Research Center, Rt 2 Box 2324, Newton, GA 39870, and Richard Taylor, J.W. Jones Eco. Res. Ctr. @ Ichauwa, Route 2, Box 2324, Newton, GA 39870.

In the fire-maintained longleaf pine (Pinus palustris) -wiregrass (Aristida stricta) ecosystem, native legumes comprise greater than 10 percent of the understory flora.  These legumes may contribute substantial amounts of fixed atmospheric N2 to the nutrient cycling of this ecosystem.  The objectives of this study were to  compare the species-specific and legume population responses to irrigation by biomass and N2-fixed in paired irrigated and adjacent control woodland areas in wet-mesic and xeric site types.  N2-fixation was measured using the δ15N natural abundance method. Irrigation did not significantly affect number of legumes per hectare or mean biomass per species, nor did irrigation significantly impact legume N2-fixation (δ15N) for either of the site-types.  However, the non-leguminous (reference) plants did show a significant shift in δ15N at wet-mesic and xeric sites, which may reflect a change in soil N-mineralization rate.  For both site types and in both treatments, δ15N was significantly different between legumes and reference species, which indicates that all of the legumes are fixing-N2.  Aboveground tissue N-content ranged from 1.9-2.9 percent N for legumes and 1.2-1.4 for the non-legumes at the xeric site, and at the wet-mesic sites, percent N for legumes ranged from 1.9-3.0, and non-legumes averaged 1.2 percent N. Growth and N2-fixation were not limited by soil moisture during the year that this study was conducted.  Evidence from this study indicates that fixed N2 from native legumes are in important source of N for this longleaf pine-wiregrass ecosystem.