INVESTIGADORES
AUSTIN Amy Theresa
artículos
Título:
Global patterns of the isotopic composition of soil and plant nitrogen
Autor/es:
AMUNDSON, RONALD; AUSTIN, AMY T; SCHUUR, E. A. G; YOO, K; MATZEK, V; KENDALL, C; UEBERSAX, A; BRENNER, D; BAISDEN, W. T
Revista:
GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
Editorial:
American Geophysical Union
Referencias:
Lugar: Washington DC; Año: 2003 vol. 17 p. 1031 - 1903
ISSN:
0886-6236
Resumen:
We compiled new and published data on the natural abundance N isotope composition (ä15N values) of soil and plant organic matter from around the world. Across a broad range of climate and ecosystem types, we found that soil and plant ä15N values systematically decreased with increasing mean annual precipitation (MAP) and decreasing mean annual temperature (MAT). Because most undisturbed soils are near N steady state, the observations suggest that an increasing fraction of ecosystem N losses are 15N-depleted forms (NO3, N2O, etc.) with decreasing MAP and increasing MAT. Wetter and colder ecosystems appear to be more efficient in conserving and recycling mineral N. Globally, plant ä15N values are more negative than soils, but the difference (ä15Nplant-ä15Nsoil) increases with decreasing MAT (and secondarily increasing MAP), suggesting a systematic change in the source of plant-available N (organic/NH4+ versus NO3−) with climate. Nitrogen isotopes reflect time integrated measures of the controls on N storage that are critical for predictions of how these ecosystems will respond to human-mediated disturbances of the global N cycle.