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HERO ID
677489
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Snow depth, soil freezing and nitrogen cycling in a northern hardwood forest landscape
Author(s)
Groffman, PM; Hardy, JP; Fashu-Kanu, S; Driscoll, CT; Cleavitt, NL; Fahey, TJ; Fisk, MC
Year
2011
Is Peer Reviewed?
Yes
Journal
Biogeochemistry
ISSN:
0168-2563
EISSN:
1573-515X
Volume
102
Issue
1
Page Numbers
223-238
DOI
10.1007/s10533-010-9436-3
Web of Science Id
WOS:000285359000015
Abstract
Increases in soil freezing associated with decreases in snow cover have been identified as a significant disturbance to nitrogen (N) cycling in northern hardwood forests. We created a range of soil freezing intensity through snow manipulation experiments along an elevation gradient at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest (HBEF) in the White Mountains, NH USA in order to improve understanding of the factors regulating freeze effects on nitrate (NO3 −) leaching, nitrous oxide (N2O) flux, potential and in situ net N mineralization and nitrification, microbial biomass carbon (C) and N content and respiration, and denitrification. While the snow manipulation treatment produced deep and persistent soil freezing at all sites, effects on hydrologic and gaseous losses of N were less than expected and less than values observed in previous studies at the HBEF. There was no relationship between frost depth, frost heaving and NO3 − leaching, and a weak relationship between frost depth and winter N2O flux. There was a significant positive relationship between dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and NO3 − concentrations in treatment plots but not in reference plots, suggesting that the snow manipulation treatment mobilized available C, which may have stimulated retention of N and prevented treatment effects on N losses. While the results support the hypothesis that climate change resulting in less snow and more soil freezing will increase N losses from northern hardwood forests, they also suggest that ecosystem response to soil freezing disturbance is affected by multiple factors that must be reconciled in future research.
Keywords
Climate change; Dissolved organic matter; Methane; Microbial biomass; Nitrate; Nitrous oxide
Tags
IRIS
•
Nitrate/Nitrite
Supplemental LitSearch Update 1600-2015
WoS
New to project
•
ISA NOxSOxPM Ecology (2018)
Cited in First Draft
Appendix C: Case Studies
Northeast US
Cited in the Second Draft
Appendix 16
16.1 Northeast
•
ISA NOxSOxPM Ecology (2020- Final Project Page)
Cited
Appendix 16
16.1 Northeast
•
LitSearch-NOx (2024)
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