Water availability is a stronger driver of soil microbial processing of organic nitrogen than tree species composition

Author:

Maxwell Tania L.123ORCID,Augusto Laurent1,Tian Ye45,Wanek Wolfgang4,Fanin Nicolas1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. ISPA, Bordeaux Sciences Agro INRAE Villenave d'Ornon France

2. Doctoral School in Sciences and Environments Université de Bordeaux Bordeaux France

3. Centre d'étude de la forêt, Département des sciences du bois et de la forêt, Faculté de foresterie, de géographie et de Géomatique Université Laval Québec Canada

4. Division of Terrestrial Ecosystem Research, Department of Microbiology and Ecosystem Science Center of Microbiology and Environmental Systems Science Vienna Austria

5. Doctoral School in Microbiology and Environmental Science University of Vienna Vienna Austria

Abstract

AbstractSoil organic nitrogen (N) cycling processes constitute a bottleneck of soil N cycling, yet little is known about how tree species composition may influence these rates, and even less under changes in soil water availability such as those that are being induced by climate change. In this study, we used a 12‐year‐old tree biodiversity experiment in southwestern France to assess the interactive effects of soil water availability (half of the blocks seasonally irrigated to double precipitation) and tree species composition (monocultural vs. mixed plots of coniferous Pinus pinaster, and of broadleaf Betula pendula). We measured gross protein depolymerisation rates using a novel high‐throughput isotope pool dilution method, along with soil microbial biomass carbon and N to calculate microbial biomass‐specific activities of soil organic N processes. Overall, high soil water availability led to a 42% increase in soil protein depolymerisation rates compared to the unirrigated plots, but we found no effect of species composition on these soil organic N cycling processes. When investigating the interactive effect of tree species mixing and soil water availability, the results suggest that mixing tree species had a negative effect on soil organic N cycling processes in the non‐irrigated blocks subject to dry summers, but that this effect tended to become positive at higher soil water availability in irrigated plots. These results put forth that soil water availability could influence potential tree species mixing effects on soil organic N cycling processes in dry conditions.Highlights Tree species (with different litter C:N ratios) had little effect on protein depolymerisation Increasing water availability via irrigation accelerated depolymerisation rates No interactive effect between tree species mixing and water availability, although trends emerged Positive trend of mixing under high water availability and negative trend under low water

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Soil Science

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