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Effects of Long-Term Application of Ammonium Sulphate on Nitrogen Fluxes in a Beech Ecosystem at Solling, Germany
Authors:Henning Meesenburg  Agustín Merino  Karl J Meiwes  Friedrich O Beese
Institution:1. Forest Research Institute of Lower Saxony, Gr?tzelstr. 2, D-37079, G?ttingen, Germany
2. Department of Soil Science and Agriculture Chemistry, E.P.S., Universidad de Santiago de Compostela, 27002, Lugo, Spain
3. Institute of Soil Science and Forest Nutrition, University of G?ttingen, Büsgenweg 2, D-37085, G?ttingen, Germany
Abstract:To study the effects of elevated inputs of acidity and nitrogen (N), 1000 mmol m-2 a-1 of ammonium sulphate (NH4NO3) equivalent to an input of potential acidity of 2000 mmol m-2 a-1 was applied annually for 11 yr between 1983 and 1993 in a beech forest at Solling, Germany. Most of the applied NH4 + was nitrified in the litter layer and in the upper mineral soil. N in soil leachate quickly responded to the elevated input, but most of the applied N was stored in the soil or left the ecosystem via pathways other than soil output. Leaching of N from the soil increased until the last year of N addition. After the last N application, N fluxes decreased rapidly to low values. The buffering of acidity produced by the nitrification of the applied NH4 + was caused mainly by three different processes: (i) sulphur (S) retention, (ii) release of aluminium, (iii) release of base cations. Retention of S took place mostly in the subsoil. 72% of the S input was recovered in output after 14 years of the experiment. Due to the increased fluxes of mobile anions with soil solution, outputs of cations increased drastically.
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