
Interactions of tissue and fertilizer nitrogen on decomposition dynamics of lignin‐rich conifer litter
Author(s) -
Perakis Steven S.,
Matkins Joselin J.,
Hibbs David E.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
ecosphere
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.255
H-Index - 57
ISSN - 2150-8925
DOI - 10.1890/es11-00340.1
Subject(s) - litter , decomposition , lignin , nitrogen , plant litter , fertilizer , nitrogen cycle , chemistry , canopy , ecosystem , zoology , agronomy , botany , ecology , biology , organic chemistry
High tissue nitrogen (N) accelerates decomposition of high‐quality leaf litter in the early phases of mass loss, but the influence of initial tissue N variation on the decomposition of lignin‐rich litter is less resolved. Because environmental changes such as atmospheric N deposition and elevated CO 2 can alter tissue N levels within species more rapidly than they alter the species composition of ecosystems, it is important to consider how within‐species variation in tissue N may shape litter decomposition and associated N dynamics. Douglas‐fir ( Pseudotsuga menziesii ) is a widespread lignin‐rich conifer that dominates forests of high carbon (C) storage across western North America, and displays wide variation in tissue and litter N that reflects landscape variation in soil N. We collected eight unique Douglas‐fir litter sources that spanned a two‐fold range in initial N concentrations (0.67–1.31%) with a narrow range of lignin (29–35%), and examined relationships between initial litter chemistry, decomposition, and N dynamics in both ambient and N fertilized plots at four sites over 3 yr. High initial litter N slowed decomposition rates in both early (0.67 yr) and late (3 yr) stages in unfertilized plots. Applications of N fertilizer to litters accelerated early‐stage decomposition, but slowed late‐stage decomposition, and most strongly affected low‐N litters, which equalized decomposition rates across litters regardless of initial N concentrations. Decomposition of N‐fertilized litters correlated positively with initial litter manganese (Mn) concentrations, with litter Mn variation reflecting faster turnover of canopy foliage in high N sites, producing younger litterfall with high N and low Mn. Although both internal and external N inhibited decomposition at 3 yr, most litters exhibited net N immobilization, with strongest immobilization in low‐N litter and in N‐fertilized plots. Our observation for lignin‐rich litter that high initial N can slow decomposition yet accelerate N release differs from findings where litter quality variation across species promotes coupled C and N release during decomposition. We suggest reevaluation of ecosystem models and projected global change effects to account for a potential decoupling of ecosystem C and N feedbacks through litter decomposition in lignin‐rich conifer forests.