Bioassay of forest floor phosphorus supply for plant growth

1985 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 156-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Van Cleve ◽  
F. Harrison

This paper considers the extent to which phosphorus (P) supply for plant use is controlled by the chemical quality of forest floor organic matter, independent of climate. Using plant bioassays, forest floor materials from representative examples of each of the major forest types in interior Alaska were examined for nutrient supplying power. The work supports conclusions reached in earlier studies which indicated that black spruce forest floors were highly nutrient limited compared with those of other interior Alaska forest types. In addition, floodplain white spruce forests may experience marked P deficiency because of dilution of the element by periodic siltation. Potential phosphorus supply for seedling growth was best described by P concentration of the rooting medium. The supply also was related to the concentrations of lignin and tannin which control forest floor decomposition and recycling of P within the microbial population.

1986 ◽  
Vol 16 (6) ◽  
pp. 1320-1326 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Van Cleve ◽  
O. W. Heal ◽  
D. Roberts

Using a bioassay approach, this paper considers the nitrogen-supplying power of forest floors from examples of the major forest types in interior Alaska. Yield and net N uptake by paper birch seedlings grown in standardized mixtures of quartz sand and forest floor organic matter, and separate incubation estimates of N mineralization and nitrification for the forest floors, were employed to evaluate potential N supply. Black spruce and floodplain white spruce forest floors supplied only one-fifth the amount of N taken up by seedlings growing in other forest floors. Incubation estimates showed these forest floors yielded 4 and 15 times less extractable N, respectively, than the more fertile birch forest floors. In comparison with earlier estimates of P supply from these same forest floors, the upland types showed greater deficiency of N whereas floodplain types showed greater deficiency of P in control of seedling yield. The latter condition is attributed to the highly calcareous nature of the floodplain mineral soil, the consequent potential for P fixation, and hence greater potential deficiency of the element compared with N in mineralizing forest floors. Nitrogen concentration of the forest floors was the best predictor of bioassay response.


1983 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 747-766 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keith Van Cleve ◽  
Lola Oliver ◽  
Robert Schlentner ◽  
Leslie A. Viereck ◽  
C. T. Dyrness

This paper considers the productivity and nutrient cycling in examples of the major forest types in interior Alaska. These ecosystem properties are examined from the standpoint of the control exerted over them by soil temperature and forest-floor chemistry. We conclude that black spruce Piceamariana (Mill.) B.S.P. occupies the coldest, wettest sites which support tree growth in interior Alaska. Average seasonal heat sums (1132 ± 32 degree days (DD)) for all other forest types were significantly higher than those encountered for black spruce (640 ± 40 DD). In addition, black spruce ecosystems display the highest average seasonal forest-floor and mineral-soil moisture contents. Forest-floor chemistry interacts with soil temperature in black spruce to produce the most decay-resistant organic matter. In black spruce the material is characterized by the highest lignin content and widest C/N (44) and C/P (404) ratios. Across the range of forest types examined in this study, soil temperature is strongly related to net annual aboveground tree production and the annual tree requirement for N, P, K, Ca, and Mg. Forest floor C/N and C/P ratios are strongly related to annual tree N and P requirement and the C/N ratio to annual tree production. In all cases these controls act to produce, in black spruce, the smallest accumulation of tree biomass, standing crop of elements, annual production, and element requirement in aboveground tree components.


1989 ◽  
Vol 19 (11) ◽  
pp. 1389-1396 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. T. Dyrness ◽  
K. Van Cleve ◽  
J. D. Levison

Soil chemical properties were studied after a wildfire in stands of white spruce (Piceaglauca (Moench) Voss), black spruce (Piceamariana (Mill.) B.S.P.), paper birch (Betulapapyrifera Marsh.), and quaking aspen (Populustremuloides Michx.). Samples of the forest floor and surface 5 cm of mineral soil were collected from burned sites and unburned controls and analyzed soon after the fire. With the exception of soil pH, effects of the fire on soil chemistry differed among the four forest types. Generally, amounts of exchangeable K, Ca, and Mg did not appreciably increase in the forest floor and surface mineral soil except in heavily burned areas in white spruce and black spruce. Fire reduced amounts of N by about 50% in white spruce, aspen, and birch forest floors. In black spruce, quantities of N were slightly higher in heavily burned locations. Forest floor C:N ratios were substantially lower in heavily burned locations in white spruce and black spruce than in unburned controls. Burning did not have a marked influence on supplies of available P in the forest floor, except in heavily burned black spruce, where average amounts were 12.50 g/m2 versus only 0.46 g/m2 in the control. Burning caused more moderate gains in available P in surface mineral soils under aspen and white spruce. We concluded that fire caused marked short-term changes in soil chemistry in the four forest types. How long these changes will persist is unknown.


1983 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 903-913 ◽  
Author(s):  
John C. Zasada ◽  
Rodney A. Norum ◽  
Robert M. Van Veldhuizen ◽  
Christian E. Teutsch

Fall seed-dispersing species, birch (Betulapapyrifera Marsh.), alder (Alnuscrispa (Ait.) Pursh), and black spruce Piceamariana (Mill.) B.S.P.), and summer-seeding species, aspen (Populustremuloides Michx.), balsam poplar (P. balsamifera L.), feltleaf willow (Salixalaxensis (Anderss.) Cov.), Scouler willow (Salixscouleriana Barratt), and Bebb willow (Salixbebbiana Sarg.), were artificially sown on seedbeds created by experimental burning in the upland black spruce/feather moss forest types in interior Alaska. At least 40% of the seeds dispersed in the fall had germinated before dispersal of summer seeds began. Germination occurred on moderately and severely burned seedbeds but not on scorched and lightly burned surfaces. Seedling survival occurred almost exclusively on severely burned surfaces. After 3 years, 82% of the plots containing some severely burned surfaces and sown with seeds from species seeded in the fall were stocked whereas 32% of the plots sown with species seeded in the spring and with the same seedbed condition were stocked.


2010 ◽  
Vol 40 (7) ◽  
pp. 1325-1335 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Yarie ◽  
K. Van Cleve

The comparative analysis of a large set of long-term fertilization and thinning studies in the major forest types of interior Alaska is summarized. Results indicate that nutrient limitations may only occur during the early spring growth period, after which moisture availability is the primary control of tree growth on warm sites. The temperature dynamics of both air and soil set seasonal bounds on the nutrient and moisture dynamics for all forest types. Air and soil temperature limitations are the primary control of intraseasonal growth in the colder topographic locations in interior Alaska. These locations are usually dominated by black spruce (Picea mariana (Mill.) Britton, Sterns, Poggenb.) vegetation types. The seasonal progression of factors controlling growth is strongly tied to the state factor structure of the landscape.


1984 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 278-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. G. Weber ◽  
K. Van Cleve

Permafrost-free and permafrost-dominated black spruce (Piceamariana (Mill.) B.S.P.) ecosystems in interior Alaska were treated with low addition levels of high enrichment isotope (<1% of the total nitrogen pool with 99 at.% excess 15N) to describe nitrogen dynamics through pools of selected forest floor components. A thick carpet of mosses, made up primarily of the feather moss species Hylocomiumsplendens (Hedw.) B.S.G. and Pleuroziumschreberi (B.S.G.) Mitt, seemed to play a vital role in the nitrogen economy of the forest floor. Nitrogen, quickly immobilized in the moss layers (green, brown) and retained there, was released very slowly to the lower organic layers (021 + 022) where most of the vascular plant roots were located. 15N uptake by the vascular understory was minimal, as was15Nexport via the soil solution. Periodic mineralization episodes, more frequent and dynamic at the permafrost-free site (where C/N ratios were lower), were largely restricted to the moss layers since available N fractions in deeper forest floor layers incorporated little label over the 3-year period. In the lower layers of the forest floor (021 + 022) temperature rather than organic matter quality appeared to be the overriding factor controlling N flow.


1983 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 795-817 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. W. Flanagan ◽  
K. Van Cleve

A variety of evergreen and deciduous forests in the taiga of interior Alaska were studied over a 5-year period to examine how the chemical quality of forest-floor organic matter affected its rate of decomposition and mineral cycling within and outside the tree vegetation. Litterbag and respiration studies were used to monitor decomposition. Natural forest-floor substrates and others altered by addition of N, P, and K fertilizer and glucose as a carbon source were studied in the laboratory and field for rates of weight loss and O2 consumption. Forest floors differing in C/N ratios, including those deficient in N, were used to measure substrate quality influences on seedling growth, nutrient content, and tannin content. Microbial (bacteria and fungi) biomass was measured across a range of forest types along with pH, base saturation total pool sizes of N and P, and annual mineralization of organic matter per square metre. Under identical moisture and temperature conditions average respiration rates in evergreen forest-floor L, F, and H substrates were 1.8, 2.8, and 2.0 times less than in the corresponding deciduous forest horizons, respectively. Birch L and F horizons had respiration rates 11.5 times higher than the corresponding black spruce layers. Weight losses in birch L, F, and H horizons were 6, 3, and 2 times higher, respectively, than in the corresponding black spruce substrates. Substrates had a quality-dependent decay rate which did not change when they were relocated within or between sites indicating that measured field climatic differences were not as influential on decay rates as substrate quality components. Fungal biomass was significantly correlated with the quantity of organic matter in all sites (n = 15, r = 0.62) but correlations were better for deciduous (n = 9, r = 0.89), and evergreen (n = 6, r = 0.82) forests separately. Strong correlations exist also between grams of organic matter decayed per square metre per year and fungal biomass (n = 13, r = 0.86), and fungal biomass and grams of N and P mineralized per square metre per year (n = 14, r = 0.95) and (n = 11, r = 0.94, respectively). Seedlings on mineral-deficient substrates produced more tannins than the controls, and seedlings on substrates with widening C/N ratios had successively less tissue with lower N content, and proportionally more roots. Nitrogen content of litter fall in increasingly nitrogen-poor forest floors was correspondingly lower. Nitrogen content of litter fall on N rich forest floors and N fertilized forest floors was proportionately higher. Nitrogen withdrawal in leaves at senescence was inversely correlated with grams N mineralized per square metre per year in forest floors. Fertilization did not influence microbial processes in the field, though lab studies indicated a negative influence of NH4, P, and K on microbial respiration. Glucose added in the laboratory and field markedly increased forest-floor microbial respiration. In vitro glucose-induced increases in respiration were not influenced by addition of ammonium nitrate and were significantly depressed by addition of P and K. In the field, fertilization had no effect on either glucose-induced respiration or microbial biomass.


1981 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 743-751 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. G. Weber ◽  
K. Van Cleve

Low addition levels of high enrichment isotope (>1% of the total nitrogen pool with 99 at.% excess 15N) were used to follow nitrogen movement through selected forest floor components of permafrost-free and permafrost-dominated black spruce ecosystems in subarctic Alaska. The nitrogen pool examined in this study was the total nitrogen pool. 15N was retained most effectively by the feather moss layer (Pleuroziumschreberi (BSG.) Mitt. and Hylocomiumsplendens (Hedw.) BSG.) on both black spruce sites. Twenty-eight months after isotope application the feather moss layer still contained over 90% of the 15N that could be recovered. The limited movement of 15N between feather moss layers and underlying forest floor horizons appeared to be slightly affected by climatological events. Differences in 15N movement patterns between permafrost-free and permafrost-dominated black spruce sites are discussed in terms of precipitation, soil temperature, and biological controls.


1983 ◽  
Vol 13 (5) ◽  
pp. 879-893 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. T. Dyrness ◽  
Rodney A. Norum

Seven units (about 2 ha each) of black spruce – feather moss forest were experimentally burned over a range of fuel moisture conditions during the summer of 1978. Surface woody fuels were sparse and the principal carrier fuel was the forest floor (largely mosses and their decomposition products). Forest floors after burning comprised a small-scale mosaic of unburned, scorched, lightly burned, moderately burned, and heavily burned (organic materials entirely consumed) conditions. Percentage of the unit area in the moderately and heavily burned condition ranged from 11.2 to 77.2% and percent decrease in forest-floor thickness varied from 27.4 to 63.1% in the seven units. Forest-floor consumption was most closely correlated with the moisture content of lower moss (01 horizon) and lower duff layers (022 horizon) at the time of burning. For the first 3 years after fire, biomass production was greater on heavily burned than on lightly burned sites (58 vs. 37 g/m2 on an annual basis). Heavily burned sites were completely dominated by the invading species Epilobiumangustifolium L., Ceratodonpurpureus (Hedw.) Brid., and Marchantiapolymorpha L., whereas lightly burned plots were occupied by sprouting species such as Calamagrostiscanadensis (Michx.) Beauv., Vacciniumuliginosum L., and Ledumgroenlandicum Oeder. Soil pH and amounts of total P and available P in the forest floor increased significantly as a result of burning; and in all cases, increases reached a maximum in moderately and heavily burned areas. Total N in the forest floor increased significantly in moderately burned, but decreased slightly in heavily burned areas. Total N and total P showed smaller increases in the surface mineral soil as a result of burning. Supplies of available P in the mineral soil increased almost 4-fold in moderately burned and over 16-fold in heavily burned areas.


1985 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert E. Schlentner ◽  
Keith Van Cleve

A soda lime technique was used to measure CO2 evolution at the soil surface in four mature forest types (aspen (Populustremuloides Michx.), paper birch (Betulapapyrifera Marsh.), black spruce (Piceamariana (Mill.) B.S.P.), and white spruce (Piceaglauca (Moeneh) Voss)) in interior Alaska. Surface temperature, 15-cm depth temperature, and soil moisture were measured concurrently with CO2 evolution. Accumulated CO2 evolution ranged from 1315 to 1654 g CO2•m−2 for the period May 1 – September 30 in 1981 and 1982 in the four stands. Data were used to develop three-dimensional response surfaces and test mathematical models of respiration in relation to substrate temperature and moisture. GRESP, a biologically based model, provided a fairly accurate simulation of the seasonal course of respiration as a function of substrate temperature and moisture. In an attempt to better define the observed response surface trends, a best-fit equation model, BRESP, was formulated. BRESP includes the moisture portion of the GRESP equation, and an altered temperature equation which more adequately defines the upper and lower thresholds of respiration in relation to substrate temperature. GRESP and BRESP each produced similar r2 values; however, higher order polynomial equations gave a better-fit model. The weakest area of all models for simulating seasonal trends was during the periods of peak respiration in June.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document