Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repositorio.inpa.gov.br/handle/1/18852
Title: Nitrogen transfer between high- and low-quality leaves on a nutrient-poor Oxisol determined by 15N enrichment
Authors: Schwendener, Carol Melanie
Lehmann, Johannes
Camargo, Plínio Barbosa de
Luizâo, Regina Celi Costa
Fernandes, Erick C.M.
Keywords: Biodiversity
Biomass
Forestry
Gas Emissions
Nitrogen
Nutrition
Soils
Microbial Biomass
Mineralization
Nitrogen Transfer
Plants (botany)
Decomposition
Leaf Litter
Mulch
Soil Nitrogen
Biodiversity
Biomass
Emission
Forestry
Leaves
Nitrogen
Soil
Gliricidia
Gliricidia Sepium
Theobroma
Theobroma Grandiflorum
Issue Date: 2005
metadata.dc.publisher.journal: Soil Biology and Biochemistry
metadata.dc.relation.ispartof: Volume 37, Número 4, Pags. 787-794
Abstract: It has been proposed that the C/N ratio, or quality, of litter or mulch mixtures affects N release. Although total N release from these mixtures and the effects on soil N are relatively well understood, a mechanistic understanding of the interactions between litter species with respect to their N release is still lacking. This study examines decomposition and N dynamics in mixtures of high-quality leguminous mulch, gliricidia [Gliricidia sepium (Jacq.) Kunth. ex Walp.] with a C/N ratio of 13, and low-quality cupuaçu [Theobroma grandiflorum (Wild. ex Spring) Schumann] litter with a C/N ratio of 42, which occur in combination in agroforestry systems. Ratios of 100:0, 80:20, 50:50, 20:80, 0:100 of fresh 15N-enriched gliricidia leaves and senescent cupuaçu leaves, totaling the same dry weight of 6.64 t ha-1, were applied to an Oxisol and sampled at 6, 14, 38, and 96 days after application. After more than 40% of the N in the gliricidia leaves had been released and the microbial biomass N reached its peak, a significant increase in available soil N occurred at day 14, which was more pronounced with greater amounts of gliricidia in the leaf mixture. However, relative to the N applied in the leaf mixture, there was no significant difference in available soil N with greater proportions of gliricidia. Total N release from the mixtures corresponded to the total N applied by gliricidia. Until day 38, cupuaçu C mineralization was significantly faster in the presence of the highest proportion of gliricidia compared to lower proportions. This faster C mineralization of more than 0.5% per day, however, did not increase total C loss or N release from cupuaçu leaves after 96 days. The use of 15N tracers identified an N transfer from gliricidia leaves and the soil to cupuaçu leaves and consequently, a lower N release from gliricidia to the soil in the presence of cupuaçu leaves. Though we expected that available N in the soil would also decrease with greater amounts of cupuaçu litter in the mixture, our results indicated an additive effect of the two species on N release and soil mineral N, with gross interactions between them canceling net interactive effects. Therefore, N release of leaf mixtures behaved as predicted from a calculated sum of individual release patterns, in spite of a transfer of N from the high- to the low-quality leaves. © 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2004.10.011
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