posted on 2015-04-07, 00:00authored byXiankai Lu, Qinggong Mao, Jiangming Mo, Frank
S. Gilliam, Guoyi Zhou, Yiqi Luo, Wei Zhang, Juan Huang
Elevated anthropogenic
nitrogen (N) deposition has become an important
driver of soil acidification at both regional and global scales. It
remains unclear, however, how long-term N deposition affects soil
buffering capacity in tropical forest ecosystems and in ecosystems
of contrasting land-use history. Here, we expand on a long-term N
deposition experiment in three tropical forests that vary in land-use
history (primary, secondary, and planted forests) in Southern China,
with N addition as NH4NO3 of 0, 50, 100, and
150 kg N ha–1 yr–1, respectively.
Results showed that all three forests were acid-sensitive ecosystems
with poor soil buffering capacity, while the primary forest had higher
base saturation and cation exchange capacity than others. However,
long-term N addition significantly accelerated soil acidification
and decreased soil buffering capacity in the primary forest, but not
in the degraded secondary and planted forests. We suggest that ecosystem
N status, influenced by different land-use history, is primarily responsible
for these divergent responses. N-rich primary forests may be more
sensitive to external N inputs than others with low N status, and
should be given more attention under global changes in the future,
because lack of nutrient cations is irreversible.