Short-term fate of nitrogen fixed by moss-cyanobacteria associations under different rainfall regimes

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Nitrogen (N) fixation by moss-cyanobacteria associations has been recognized as an important N input pathway in many ecosystems from arctic tundra to tropical forests. However, the transfer of fixed N2 from mosses to the soil as well as the effects of rainfall frequency and volume on this N transfer has hardly been studied – even though mosses can leach nutrients upon rewetting. In this study, we investigated the transfer of fixed N2 by moss-cyanobacteria associations in one month under four watering regimes with a combination of high and low volume and frequency. For this, we used two morphologically similar moss species collected from ecosystems with different climate and N availability (subarctic - Hylocomium splendens; and tropical - Thuidium delicatulum). Acetylene reduction assays were conducted as a measure of N2 fixation rates in mosses, and 15N-N2 tracing was used to follow the fixed N2 from moss to the underlying substrate. Nitrogen fixation rates were higher in T. delicatulum than in H. splendens, but rainfall volume and frequency did not show strong effects on N2 fixation rates. Nonetheless, the extent of N leached from mosses was more sensitive to an increase in rainfall volume than to an increase in frequency, and more N was lost from T. delicatulum under high volume precipitation than from H. splendens. Both total nitrogen and 15N enrichment results demonstrate that the fixed N2 was mostly stored in moss tissues with less than 1 % leached to the substrate. Our results show that both moss species retain almost all fixed N2 within their tissues under small rainfall disturbances within one month, while increased N availability under higher precipitation volume renders some moss species an important N source for the soil.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftBasic and Applied Ecology
Vol/bind79
Sider (fra-til)9-16
Antal sider8
ISSN1439-1791
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2024

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
We thank the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat and SITES for the support of the work done at the Abisko Scientific Research Station. We thank SINAC/CONAGEBIO for access and support at the Chirrip\u00F3 National Park, Costa Rica (permit number R-053-2021-OT-CONAGEBIO). We acknowledge funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement No. 947719) for the Starting Grant SYMBIONIX. The Danish National Research Foundation supported activities within the Center for Volatile Interactions (VOLT, DNRF168).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024

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