Publicaciones
Se encontró/encontraron 6 Publicaciones(s).
Velescu, A.; Homeier, J.; Bendix, J.; Valarezo, C. & Wilcke, W. (2021): Response of water-bound fluxes of potassium, calcium, magnesium and sodium to nutrient additions in an Ecuadorian tropical montane forest. Forest Ecology and Management 501(119661), 1-14.
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DOI: 10.1016/j.foreco.2021.119661
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Resumen:
Resumen:
In the past two decades, the Amazon-exposed, tropical montane rain forests in south Ecuador experienced increasing deposition of reactive N mainly from Amazonian forest fires, episodic Ca and Mg inputs from Saharan dust, and a low but constant P deposition from unknown sources. To explore the response of this tropical, perhumid ecosystem to nutrient inputs, we established in 2007 a Nutrient Manipulation Experiment (NUMEX). Since 2008, we have applied 50 kg ha−1 year−1 of N as urea, 10 kg ha−1 year−1 of P as NaH2PO4·H2O, 50 kg ha−1 year−1 of N + 10 kg ha−1 year−1 of P and 10 kg ha−1 year−1 of Ca as CaCl2·H2O in a randomized block design at 2000 m a.s.l. in a natural forest of the south Ecuadorian Andes. Previous studies have shown that alkali and alkaline earth metals had beneficial effects on the functioning of N and P co-limited tropical forests occurring on acidic soils. Therefore, we determined the response of all major aqueous ecosystem fluxes of K, Ca, Mg and Na to nutrient amendments, to understand how increasing atmospheric deposition would affect their cycling in the future. Additions of N and P decreased K leaching from the organic layer and in the mineral soil, thus tightening K cycling. This suggests that increasing future N and P availability may result in K limitation in the long term. The leaching of Ca and Mg from the canopy increased in response to amendments of N and P and we observed an enhanced uptake of these nutrients also if Ca was amended alone. Although N was applied as urea, acidity of soil solutions and leaching of K, Ca, Mg and Na did not increase following separate N amendments. In spite of the acid soils and of its low cation-exchange competitivity, Na included in the P fertilizer was only partly leached from the organic layer. We suggest that it was probably required to cover an unmet Na demand of the soil fauna. Our results demonstrate the major role in the functioning of the tropical montane forests played by K, Ca and Mg as potential future growth-limiting elements and increasingly required nutrients in response to rising N and P availability, while they also support the importance of Na as a functional element in these ecosystems.
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Keywords: |
Ecuador |
NUMEX |
nutrient manipulation |
tropical montane forest |
nutrient additions |
base cations |
Velescu, A.; Valarezo, C. & Wilcke, W. (2016): Response of dissolved carbon and nitrogen concentrations to moderate nutrient additions in a tropical montane forest of South Ecuador. Frontiers in Earth Science 4(58), 1-18.
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DOI: 10.3389/feart.2016.00058
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Resumen:
Resumen:
In the past two decades, the tropical montane rain forests in south Ecuador experienced increasing deposition of reactive nitrogen mainly originating from Amazonian forest fires, while Saharan dust inputs episodically increased deposition of base metals. Increasing air temperature and unevenly distributed rainfall have allowed for longer dry spells in a perhumid ecosystem. This might have favored mineralization of dissolved organic matter (DOM) by microorganisms and increased nutrient release from the organic layer. Environmental change is expected to impact the functioning of this ecosystem belonging to the biodiversity hotspots of the Earth.
In 2007, we established a nutrient manipulation experiment (NUMEX) to understand the response of the ecosystem to moderately increased nutrient inputs. Since 2008, we have continuously applied 50 kg ha-1 a-1 of nitrogen (N), 10 kg ha-1 a-1 of phosphorus (P), 50 kg + 10 kg ha-1 a-1 of N and P and 10 kg ha-1 a-1 of calcium (Ca) in a randomized block design at 2000 m a.s.l. in a natural forest on the Amazonia-exposed slopes of the south Ecuadorian Andes.
Nitrogen concentrations in throughfall increased following N+P additions, while separate N amendments only increased nitrate concentrations. Total organic carbon (TOC) and dissolved organic nitrogen (DON) concentrations showed high seasonal variations in litter leachate and decreased significantly in the P and N+P treatments, but not in the N treatment. Thus, P availability plays a key role in the mineralization of DOM. TOC/DON ratios were narrower in throughfall than in litter leachate but their temporal course did not respond to nutrient amendments.
Our results revealed an initially fast, positive response of the C and N cycling to nutrient additions which declined with time. TOC and DON cycling only change if N and P supply are improved concurrently, while NO3-N leaching increases only if N is separately added. This indicates co-limitation of the microorganisms by N and P. The current increasing reactive N deposition will increase N export from the root zone, while it will only accelerate TOC and DON turnover if P availability is simultaneously increased. The Saharan dust-related Ca deposition has no impact on TOC and DON turnover.
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Keywords: |
Ecuador |
NUMEX |
nutrient manipulation |
tropical montane forest |
dissolved organic N |
nutrient additions |
total organic C |
nitrate leaching |
Ahlers, J. (2016): Variabilität der Feinstreuquantität und -qualität sowie die Auswirkungen einer kontinuierlichen N und P Düngung entlang eines Höhengradienten im tropischen Bergregenwald Südecuadors University of Goettingen, bachelor thesis
Kotowska, M. & Werner, F.A. (2013): Environmental controls over methane emissions from bromeliad phytotelmata: The role of phosphorus and nitrogen availability, temperature, and water content. GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES 27, 1-8.
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DOI: 10.1002/2013GB004612
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Resumen:
Resumen:
Tank bromeliads are common epiphytic plants throughout neotropical forests that store
signi?cant amounts of water in phytotelmata (tanks) formed by highly modi?ed leafs.
Methanogenic archaea in these tanks have recently been identi?ed as a signi?cant source of
atmospheric methane. We address the effects of environmental drivers (temperature, tank
water content, sodium phosphate [P], and urea [N] addition) on methane production in
anaerobically incubated bromeliad slurry and emissions from intact bromeliad tanks in
montane Ecuador. N addition ? 1 mg g 1 had a signi?cantly positive effect on headspace
methane concentrations in incubation jars while P addition did not affect methane
production at any dosage (? 1 mg g 1 ). Tank bromeliads (Tillandsia complanata) cultivated
in situ showed signi?cantly increased ef?uxes of methane in response to the addition of
26 mg N addition per tank but not to lower dosage of N or any dosage of P (? 5.2 mg plant 1 ).
There was no signi?cant interaction between N and P addition. The brevity of the
stimulatory effect of N addition on plant methane ef?uxes (1–2 days) points at N
competition by other microorganisms or bromeliads. Methane ef?ux from plants closely
followed within-day temperature ?uctuations over 24 h cycles, yet the dependency of
temperature was not exponential as typical for terrestrial wetlands but instead linear. In
simulated drought, methane emission from bromeliad tanks was maintained with minimum
amounts of water and regained after a short lag phase of approximately 24 h. Our results
suggest that methanogens in bromeliads are primarily limited by N and that direct effects of
global change (increasing temperature and seasonality, remote fertilization) on bromeliad
methane emissions are of moderate scale.
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Keywords: |
nutrients |
gas emission |
NUMEX |
N-cycle |
nitrogen |
Gas exchange |
phosphorus |
nutrient manipulation |
nutrient limitation |
phosphorus availability |
nutrient cycle |
methane |
Rillig, M.C.; Camenzind, T.; Velescu, A.; Wilcke, W.; Homeier, J.; Horn, S. & Hempel, S. (2014): Nitrogen and phosphorus additions impact arbuscular mycorrhizal abundance and molecular diversity in a tropical montane forest. Global Change Biology --, --.
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DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12618
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Resumen:
Resumen:
Increased nitrogen (N) depositions expected in the future endanger the diversity and stability of ecosystems primarily limited by N, but also often co-limited by other nutrients like phosphorus (P). In this context a nutrient manipulation experiment (NUMEX) was set up in a tropical montane rainforest in southern Ecuador, an area identified as biodiversity hotspot. We examined impacts of elevated N and P availability on arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), a group of obligate biotrophic plant symbionts with an important role in soil nutrient cycles. We tested the hypothesis that increased nutrient availability will reduce AMF abundance, reduce species richness and shift the AMF community toward lineages previously shown to be favored by fertilized conditions. NUMEX was designed as a full factorial randomized block design. Soil cores were taken after 2 years of nutrient additions in plots located at 2000 m above sea level. Roots were extracted and intraradical AMF abundance determined microscopically; the AMF community was analyzed by 454-pyrosequencing targeting the large subunit rDNA. We identified 74 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) with a large proportion of Diversisporales. N additions provoked a significant decrease in intraradical abundance, whereas AMF richness was reduced significantly by N and P additions, with the strongest effect in the combined treatment (39% fewer OTUs), mainly influencing rare species. We identified a differential effect on phylogenetic groups, with Diversisporales richness mainly reduced by N additions in contrast to Glomerales highly significantly affected solely by P. Regarding AMF community structure, we observed a compositional shift when analyzing presence/absence data following P additions. In conclusion, N and P additions in this ecosystem affect AMF abundance, but especially AMF species richness; these changes might influence plant community composition and productivity and by that various ecosystem processes.
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Keywords: |
ECSF |
NUMEX |
nitrogen |
AM fungi |
nutrient manipulation |
Martinson, G.; Corre, M. & Veldkamp, E. (2012): Responses of nitrous oxide fluxes and soil nitrogen cycling to nutrient additions in montane forests along an elevation gradient in southern Ecuador. Biogeochemistry online , online.
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DOI: 10.1007/s10533-012-9753-9
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Resumen:
Resumen:
Tropical montane forests are commonly limited by N or co-limited by N and P. Projected increases in N deposition in tropical montane regions are thought to be insufficient for vegetation demand and are not therefore expected to affect soil N availability and N2O emissions. We established a factorial Nand P-addition experiment (i.e., N, P, N ? P, and control) across an elevation gradient of montane forests in Ecuador to test these hypotheses: (1) moderate rates of N and P additions are able to stimulate soil-N cycling rates and N2O fluxes, and (2) the magnitude and timing of soil N2O-flux responses depend on the initial nutrient status of the forest soils. Moderate rates of nutrients were added: 50 kg N ha-1 year-1 (in the form of urea) and 10 kg P ha-1 year-1 (in the form of NaH2PO4 . 2H2O) split in two equal applications. We tested the hypotheses by measuring changes in net rates of soil–N cycling and N2O fluxes during the first 2 years (2008??2009) of nutrient manipulation in an oldgrowth premontane forest at 1,000 m, growing on a Cambisol soil with no organic layer, in an old-growth lower montane forest at 2,000 m, growing on a Cambisol soil with an organic layer, and an oldgrowth upper montane rainforest at 3,000 m, growing on a Histosol soil with a thick organic layer. Among the control plots, net nitrification rates were largest at the 1,000-m site whereas net nitrification was not detectable at the 2,000and 3,000-m sites. The already large net nitrification at the 1,000-m site was not affected by nutrient additions, but net nitrification became detectable at the 2,000and 3000-m sites after the second year of N and N + P additions. N2O emissions increased rapidly following N and N ? P additions at the 1,000-m site whereas only smaller increases occurred at the 2,000and 3,000-m sites during the second year of N and N + P additions. Addition of P alone had no effect on net rates of soil N cycling and N2O fluxes at any elevation. Our results showed that the initial soil N status, which may also be influenced by presence or absence of organic layer, soil moisture and temperature as encompassed by the elevation gradient, is a good indicator of how soil N cycling and N2O fluxes may respond to future increases in nutrient additions.
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Keywords: |
phosphorus |
mountain forest |
N2O emissions |
soil N availability |
nutrient manipulation |
nutrient limitation |
wood specific gravity |
aboveground biomass |
environmental gradients |
carbon stocks |
Pilodyn wood tester |