US Forest Service
  
Treesearch

Rocky Mountain Research Station

 

US Forest Service
P.O. Box 96090
Washington, D.C.
20090-6090

(202) 205-8333

Global Forest Information Service

Science.gov - We Participate

USA.gov  Government Made Easy

Publication Information
Bookmark and Share

Title: Soil nitrogen accretion along a floodplain terrace chronosequence in northwest Alaska: Influence of the nitrogen-fixing shrub Shepherdia Canadensis

Author: Rhoades, Charles; Binkley, Dan; Oskarsson, Hlynur; Stottlemyer, Robert

Date: 2008

Source: Ecoscience. 15(2): 223-­230.

Description: Nitrogen enters terrestrial ecosystems through multiple pathways during primary succession. We measured accumulation of total soil nitrogen and changes in inorganic nitrogen (N) pools across a 300-y sequence of river terraces in northwest Alaska and assessed the contribution of the nitrogen-fixing shrub Shepherdia canadensis. Our work compared 5 stages of floodplain succession, progressing from a sparsely vegetated silt cap to dense shrubby vegetation, balsam poplar-dominated (Populus balsamifera) and white spruce-dominated (Picea glauca) mixed forests, and old-growth white spruce forest. Total soil N (0-30 cm depth) increased throughout the age sequence, initially by 2.4 g N·m-2·y-1 during the first 120 y of terrace development, then by 1.6 g N·m-2·y-1 during the subsequent 2 centuries. Labile soil N, measured by anaerobic incubation, increased most rapidly during the first 85 y of terrace formation, then remained relatively constant during further terrace development. On recently formed terraces, Shepherdia shrubs enriched soil N pools several-fold compared to soil beneath Salix spp. shrubs or intercanopy sites. Total and labile soil N accretion was proportional to Shepherdia cover during the first century of terrace development, and mineral soil δ15N content indicated that newly formed river terraces receive substantial N through N-fixation. About half the 600 g total N·m-2 accumulated across the river terrace chronosequence occurred during the 120 y when S. canadensis was dominant. Sediment deposited by periodic flooding continued to add N to terrace soils after the decline in Shepherdia abundance and may have contributed 25% of the total N found in the floodplain terrace soils.

Keywords: floodplain forest, natural abundance N isotopes, primary succession, riparian biogeochemistry, sedimentation, terrestrial N cycling

View and Print this Publication (445 K)

Publication Notes: 

  • We recommend that you also print this page and attach it to the printout of the article, to retain the full citation information.
  • This article was written and prepared by U.S. Government employees on official time, and is therefore in the public domain.

 [ Get Acrobat ]  Get the latest version of the Adobe Acrobat reader or Acrobat Reader for Windows with Search and Accessibility

Citation

Rhoades, Charles; Binkley, Dan; Oskarsson, Hlynur; Stottlemyer, Robert  2008.  Soil nitrogen accretion along a floodplain terrace chronosequence in northwest Alaska: Influence of the nitrogen-fixing shrub Shepherdia Canadensis.   Ecoscience. 15(2): 223-­230..

US Forest Service - Research & Development
Last Modified:  April 3, 2013


USDA logo which links to the department's national site. Forest Service logo which links to the agency's national site.