Journal article

The biodiversity-N cycle relationship: a N-15 tracer experiment with soil from plant mixtures of varying diversity to model N pool sizes and transformation rates


Authors listLama, S; Kuhn, T; Lehmann, MF; Müller, C; Gonzalez, O; Eisenhauer, N; Lange, M; Scheu, S; Oelmann, Y; Wilcke, W

Publication year2020

Pages1047-1061

JournalBiology and Fertility of Soils

Volume number56

Issue number7

ISSN0178-2762

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s00374-020-01480-x

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
We conducted a(15)N tracer experiment in laboratory microcosms with field-fresh soil samples from a biodiversity experiment to evaluate the relationship between grassland biodiversity and N cycling. To embrace the complexity of the N cycle, we determined N exchange between five soil N pools (labile and recalcitrant organic N, dissolved NH(4)(+)and NO(3)(-)in soil solution, and exchangeable NH4+) and eight N transformations (gross N mineralization from labile and recalcitrant organic N, NH(4)(+)immobilization into labile and recalcitrant organic N, autotrophic nitrification, heterotrophic nitrification, NO(3)(-)immobilization, adsorption of NH4+) expected in aerobic soils with the help of the N-cycle modelNtrace. We used grassland soil of the Jena Experiment, which includes plant mixtures with 1 to 60 species and 1 to 4 functional groups (legumes, grasses, tall herbs, small herbs). The 19 soil samples of one block of the Jena Experiment were labeled with either(15)NH(4)(+)or(15)NO(3)(-)or both. In the presence of legumes, gross N mineralization and autotrophic nitrification increased significantly because of higher soil N concentrations in legume-containing plots and high microbial activity. Similarly, the presence of grasses significantly increased the soil NH(4)(+)pool, gross N mineralization, and NH(4)(+)immobilization, likely because of enhanced microbial biomass and activity by providing large amounts of rhizodeposits through their dense root systems. In our experiment, previously reported plant species richness effects on the N cycle, observed in a larger-scale field experiment within the Jena Experiment, were not seen. However, specific plant functional groups had a significant positive impact on the N cycling in the incubated soil samples.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleLama, S., Kuhn, T., Lehmann, M., Müller, C., Gonzalez, O., Eisenhauer, N., et al. (2020) The biodiversity-N cycle relationship: a N-15 tracer experiment with soil from plant mixtures of varying diversity to model N pool sizes and transformation rates, Biology and Fertility of Soils, 56(7), pp. 1047-1061. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00374-020-01480-x

APA Citation styleLama, S., Kuhn, T., Lehmann, M., Müller, C., Gonzalez, O., Eisenhauer, N., Lange, M., Scheu, S., Oelmann, Y., & Wilcke, W. (2020). The biodiversity-N cycle relationship: a N-15 tracer experiment with soil from plant mixtures of varying diversity to model N pool sizes and transformation rates. Biology and Fertility of Soils. 56(7), 1047-1061. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00374-020-01480-x


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:12