M. Carnol et P. Ineson, Environmental factors controlling NO3- leaching, N2O emissions and numbersof NH4+ oxidisers in a coniferous forest soil, SOIL BIOL B, 31(7), 1999, pp. 979-990
Main and interactive effects of temperature, throughfall volume and NH4+ de
position on soil solution NO3- concentrations, N2O emissions and numbers of
NH4+ oxidisers were investigated in a controlled laboratory experiment. La
rge intact soil cores from a Picea abies (L.) Karat. stand were incubated a
ccording to an 'incomplete factorial design' at 4, 12 or 20 degrees C and w
atered every 2 weeks with 300, 500 or 700 ml (442, 737 and 1032 mm yr(-1))
of a natural throughfall solution enriched with 0, 37.5 or 75 kg NH4+-N ha(
-1) yr(-1). Watering and sampling were performed every 2 weeks, during a 11
2 d period. At d 112, a temperature optimum for NO3--N concentrations in th
e leachate, NO3--N fluxes and numbers of NH4+ oxidisers in the mineral soil
layer was determined at ca. 11 degrees C. NO3--N concentrations also decre
ased with throughfall volume, towards a minimum at 590 ml, with temperature
however contributing most to modelling NO3--N concentrations and the two f
actors acting independently. The model explained 59% of the variability in
the data, and the regression between observed and predicted concentrations
was highly significant (P < 0.0001, r(2) = 0.93). NO3--N fluxes increased q
uadratically with throughfall volume, and throughfall volume and NH4+ depos
ition interacted significantly in determining the numbers of NH4+ oxidisers
in the mineral soil layer. Numbers of NH4+ oxidisers were higher in the hu
mus layer and decreased with increasing temperatures. N2O fluxes increased
quadratically with temperature, and the linear and quadratic effects of thr
oughfall volume (maximum at 500 ml). Results suggest that optimum temperatu
res for net nitrification may have been overestimated in previous studies b
y the use of disturbed soils. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights res
erved.