Effects of experimental and seasonal drying on soil microbial biomass and nutrient cycling in four lowland tropical forests

被引:0
|
作者
Lee H. Dietterich
Nicholas J. Bouskill
Makenna Brown
Biancolini Castro
Stephany S. Chacon
Lily Colburn
Amanda L. Cordeiro
Edwin H. García
Adonis Antonio Gordon
Eugenio Gordon
Alexandra Hedgpeth
Weronika Konwent
Gabriel Oppler
Jacqueline Reu
Carley Tsiames
Eric Valdes
Anneke Zeko
Daniela F. Cusack
机构
[1] Colorado State University,Department of Ecosystem Science and Sustainability
[2] University of California,Department of Geography
[3] Los Angeles,Climate and Ecosystem Sciences Division
[4] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,undefined
[5] Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute,undefined
[6] US Army Engineer Research and Development Center,undefined
[7] Environmental Laboratory,undefined
[8] University of Georgia,undefined
[9] River Basin Center,undefined
来源
Biogeochemistry | 2022年 / 161卷
关键词
Climate change; Panama; Precipitation; Soil nutrients; Soil microbes; Enzyme activities;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Changes in precipitation represent a major effect of climate change on tropical forests, which contain some of the earth’s largest terrestrial carbon (C) stocks. Such changes are expected to influence microbes, nutrients, and the fate of C in tropical forest soils. To explore this, we assessed soil microbial biomass, potential extracellular enzyme activities, and nutrient availability in a partial throughfall exclusion experiment in four seasonal lowland tropical humid forests in Panama with wide variation in precipitation and soil fertility. We hypothesized that throughfall exclusion would reduce microbial biomass and activity and accentuate dry season soil nutrient accumulation, with larger effects in wetter, less drought-resistant forests. We observed a baseline seasonal pattern of decreased microbial biomass and increased extractable dissolved organic C (DOC), total dissolved nitrogen (TDN), nitrate (NO3−), and resin-extractable phosphorus (P) in the dry season, with the strongest patterns for nitrogen (N). However, potential enzyme activities showed no consistent seasonality. In line with seasonal drying, throughfall exclusion decreased soil microbial biomass in the wet season and increased TDN and NO3−, especially in the dry season. In contrast to seasonal drying, throughfall exclusion decreased DOC and did not affect resin-extractable P, but slightly decreased potential phosphatase activities. Potential enzyme activities varied among sites and sampling times, but did not explain much variation in microbial biomass or substrate availability. We conclude that reduced rainfall in tropical forests might accentuate some dry season patterns, like reductions in microbial biomass and accumulation of extractable nutrients. However, our data also suggest new patterns, like reduced inputs of DOC to soils with drying, which could have cascading effects on soil ecological function and C storage.
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页码:227 / 250
页数:23
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