Wednesday, November 7, 2007 - 10:15 AM
289-4

N Conservation in a Pristine South Chilean Nothofagus Forest: A 15-N Tracing Approach.

Dries Huygens1, Roberto Godoy2, Pamela Templer3, Leandro Paulino4, Carlos Oyarzún2, Chris Müller5, Oswald Van Cleemput1, and Pascal Boeckx1. (1) Ghent University, Gent, Belgium, (2) Universidad Austral, Valdivia, Chile, (3) Boston University, Boston, MA 02215, (4) Universidad de Concepcion, Chian, Chile, (5) University of Giessen, Giessen, Germany

A 15N pulse chase study was carried out in a south Chilean Nothofagus betuloides forest soil, characterized by low N inputs and absence of human disturbance. We applied 15N pool dilution, combined with 15N pulse tracing as a complementary approach to gain insight in the kinetics, short- and long-term fate of inorganic N additions. High gross mineralization rates (21.0 ± 10.2 mg N kg-1) assure a constant nutrient availability for vegetation and microbial community structures. Heterotrophic nitrification appeared to be, almost exclusively, the dominant gross NO3- production (2.3 ± 0.6 mg N kg-1) pathway. Nitrate consumption processes, such as dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium (DNRA) and fast immobilization to soil organic matter (SOM) maintained standing NO3- pool sizes low and assure a tight N cycling. The short-term fate of the 15NH4+ was indicated to be mainly soil organic matter (50%) followed by NH4+ (42%), microbial biomass (13%) and roots (6%). The small transfer of 15NH4+ to NO3- can be explained by the limited occurrence of autotrophic nitrification in this Andisol. In the short-term, 15N-NO3- was relocated to soil organic matter (62%), soluble organic N (21%), NH4+ (6%) and roots (6%). Completer disappearance of the 15N-NO3- 1 day after addition, indicated a high turnover of NO3-. One year after 15N addition, 84% and 69% (for 15N-NH4+ and 15N-NO3-, respectively) of the label was recovered in the 0-10 cm soil layer, mainly in the SOM and root N pool. Leaching losses of 15N pulses could only be found shortly after 15N addition, indicating that continuous dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) losses as a result of dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) turnover do not seem plausible. The simultaneously operating N transformation processes present a good example of a tight N cycle that is optimized for maximum N retention