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Seasonal dynamics of soil net nitrogen mineralization under moss crust in Shapotou region, northern China.

HU Rui, WANG Xin-ping, PAN Yan-xia, ZHANG Ya-feng, ZHANG Hao, CHEN Ning   

  1. (Shapotou Desert Research and Experiment Station, Cold and Arid Regions Environmental and Engineering Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou 730000, China)
  • Online:2015-04-18 Published:2015-04-18

Abstract: Seasonal variations of soil inorganic nitrogen (N) pool and net N transformation rate in mosscovered soil and in the bare soil were comparatively observed by incubating intact soil columns with parafilm capping in the field in a natural vegetation area of Shapotou, southeastern fringe of the Tengger Desert. We found pronounced seasonal variations in soil available N content and net N transformation rate in both mosscovered soil and bare soil, with significant differences among different months. In nongrowing season, soil available N content and net N transformation rate were significantly higher in March and October than in other months. Furthermore, immobilization was the dominant form of N mineralization, and no significant difference in net soil N mineralization rate was found between the two sampling soils. In growing season, soil available N content and net N transformation rate markedly increased and reached their peak values during June to August (17.18 mg·kg-1 and 0.11 mg·kg-1·d-1, respectively). Both soil net nitrification and N mineralization rates in mosscovered soil were significantly higher than in bare soil. Soil ammonium and nitrate N content in April and May were higher in mosscovered soil (2.66 and 3.16 mg·kg-1, respectively) than in bare soil (1.02 and 2.37 mg·kg-1, respectively); while the tendency was the converse in June and September, with 7.01 mg·kg-1 for soil ammonium content and 7.40 mg·kg-1 for nitrate N content in bare soil, and they were 6.39 and 6.36 mg·kg-1 in mosscovered soil, respectively. Therefore, the existence and succession of moss crusts could be considered as one of the important biological factors affecting soil N cycling through regulating soil available N content and promoting soil N mineralization process.