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Positive correlation between wood δ 15N and stream nitrate concentrations in two temperate deciduous forests

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A limitation to understanding drivers of long-term trends in terrestrial nitrogen (N) availability in forests and its subsequent influence on stream nitrate export is a general lack of integrated analyses using long-term data on terrestrial and aquatic N cycling at comparable spatial scales. Here we analyze relationships between stream nitrate concentrations and wood δ 15N records (n = 96 trees) across five neighboring headwater catchments in the Blue Ridge physiographic province and within a single catchment in the Appalachian Plateau physiographic province in the eastern United States. Climatic, acidic deposition, and forest disturbance datasets were developed to elucidate the influence of these factors on terrestrial N availability through time. We hypothesized that spatial and temporal variation of terrestrial N availability, for which tree-ring δ 15N records serve as a proxy, affects the variation of stream nitrate concentration across space and time. Across space at the Blue Ridge study sites, stream nitrate concentration increased linearly with increasing catchment mean wood δ 15N. Over time, stream nitrate concentrations decreased with decreasing wood δ 15N in five of the six catchments. Wood δ 15N showed a significant negative relationship with disturbance and acidic deposition. Disturbance likely exacerbated N limitation by inducing nitrate leaching and ultimately enhancing vegetative uptake. As observed elsewhere, lower rates of acidic deposition and subsequent deacidification of soils may increase terrestrial N availability. Despite the ephemeral modifications of terrestrial N availability by these two drivers and climate, long-term declines in terrestrial N availability were robust and have likely driven much of the declines in stream nitrate concentration throughout the central Appalachians.

Impact/Purpose

A limitation to understanding drivers of long-term trends in terrestrial N availability and its subsequent influence on stream nitrate export is a general lack of long-term data on terrestrial and aquatic N cycling at comparable spatial scales. Catchments where long-term records of stream nutrient export exist and multiple tree-ring δ15N records of multiple species can be obtained represent promising locations for assessing the relationship between, and drivers of, stream nitrate export and terrestrial N availability. To assess the relationship between terrestrial N availability and stream N export and to identify candidate drivers of the temporal variability of wood δ15N, we assembled dendroisotopic records for 96 trees and stream nitrate records for six small forested catchments in the central Appalachian Mountains.

Citation

Sabo, R., A. Elmore, D. Nelson, C. Clark, T. Fisher, AND K. Eshleman. Positive correlation between wood δ 15N and stream nitrate concentrations in two temperate deciduous forests. IOP Publishing, BRISTOL, UK, 2(2):1-17, (2020). [DOI: 10.1088/2515-7620/ab77f8]

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DOI: Positive correlation between wood δ 15N and stream nitrate concentrations in two temperate deciduous forests
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Last updated on March 23, 2020
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