Dissolved and gaseous nitrogen losses in forests controlled by soil nutrient stoichiometry
Filip Oulehle, Christine L. Goodale, Chris Evans, Tomáš Chuman, Jakub Hruška, Pavel Krám, Tomáš Navrátil, Miroslav Tesař, Alexandr Ač, Otmar Urban, Karolina Tahovská
Abstract
Abstract Global chronic nitrogen (N) deposition to forests can alleviate ecosystem N limitation, with potentially wide ranging consequences for biodiversity, carbon sequestration, soil and surface water quality, and greenhouse gas emissions. However, the ability to predict these consequences requires improved quantification of hard-to-measure N fluxes, particularly N gas loss and soil N retention. Here we combine a unique set of long-term catchment N budgets in the central Europe with ecosystem 15 N data to reveal fundamental controls over dissolved and gaseous N fluxes in temperate forests. Stream leaching losses of dissolved N corresponded with nutrient stoichiometry of the forest floor, with stream N losses increasing as ecosystems progress towards phosphorus limitation, while soil N storage increased with oxalate extractable iron and aluminium content. Our estimates of soil gaseous losses based on 15 N stocks averaged 2.5 ± 2.2 kg N ha −1 yr −1 and comprised 20% ± 14% of total N deposition. Gaseous N losses increased with forest floor N:P ratio and with dissolved N losses. Our relationship between gaseous and dissolved N losses was also able to explain previous 15 N-based N loss rates measured in tropical and subtropical catchments, suggesting a generalisable response driven by nitrate (NO 3 − ) abundance and in which the relative importance of dissolved N over gaseous N losses tended to increase with increasing NO 3 − export. Applying this relationship globally, we extrapolated current gaseous N loss flux from forests to be 8.9 Tg N yr −1 , which represent 39% of current N deposition to forests worldwide.