AI Article Synopsis

  • This study explores the effects of five years of nitrogen additions (NH4, NO3, NH3) on soils and litter in a peatland.
  • Findings reveal that all nitrogen forms increased phosphatase activity but had varying impacts based on litter species and whether effects were direct or indirect.
  • While NH3 did not affect CO2 emissions from Calluna vulgaris litter, both NO3 and NH4 significantly reduced CO2 fluxes, indicating complex interactions with nitrogen deposition in peatland ecosystems.

Article Abstract

Here we investigate the response of soils and litter to 5 years of experimental additions of ammonium (NH4), nitrate (NO3), and ammonia (NH3) to an ombrotrophic peatland. We test the importance of direct (via soil) and indirect (via litter) effects on phosphatase activity and efflux of CO2. We also determined how species representing different functional types responded to the nitrogen treatments. Our results demonstrate that additions of NO3, NH4 and NH3 all stimulated phosphatase activity but the effects were dependent on species of litter and mechanism (direct or indirect). Deposition of NH3 had no effect on efflux of CO2 from Calluna vulgaris litter, despite it showing signs of stress in the field, whereas both NO3 and NH4 reduced CO2 fluxes. Our results show that the collective impacts on peatlands of the three principal forms of nitrogen in atmospheric deposition are a result of differential effects and mechanisms on individual components.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envpol.2010.06.038DOI Listing

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