We conducted a 456-d laboratory incubation of an old-growth coniferous
forest soil to aid in the elucidation of C controls on N cycling proc
esses in forest soils. Gross rates of N mineralization, immobilization
, and nitrification were measured by N-15 isotope dilution, and net ra
tes of N mineralization and nitrification were calculated from changes
in KCl-extractable inorganic N and NO3- -N pool sizes, respectively.
Changes in the availability of C were assessed by monitoring rates of
CO2 evolution and the sizes of extractable organic C and microbial bio
mass pools. Net and gross rates of N mineralization (r(2) = 0.038, P =
.676) and nitrification (r(2) = 0.403, P =.125)were not significantly
correlated over the course of the incubation, suggesting that the fact
ors controlling N consumptive and productive processes do not equally
affect these processes. A significant increase in the NO3- pool size (
net nitrification) only occurred after 140 d, when the NO3- pool size
increased suddenly and massively. However, gross nitrification rates w
ere substantial throughout the entire incubation and were poorly corre
lated with these changes in NO(3)(-)pool sizes. Concurrent decreases i
n the microbial biomass suggest that large increases in NO3- pool size
s after prolonged incubation of coniferous forest soil may arise from
reductions in the rate of microbial immobilization of NO3-, rather tha
n from one of the mechanisms proposed previously (e.g., sequestering o
f NH4+ by microbial heterotrophs, the deactivation of allelopathic com
pounds, or large increases in autotrophic nitrifier populations). Stro
ng correlations were found between rates of CO2 evolution and gross N
mineralization (r(2) = 0.974, P <.0001) and immobilization (r(2) = 0.9
80, P <.0001), but not between CO2 evolution and net N mineralization
rates. Microbial growth efficiency, determined by combining estimates
of gross N immobilization, CO2 evolution, and microbial biomass C and
N pool sizes, declined exponentially over the incubation. These result
s suggest the utilization of lower quality substrates as C availabilit
y declined during incubation. Results from this research indicate the
measurement of gross rates of N transformations in soil provides a pow
erful tool for assessing C and N cycling relationships in forests.