Increasing drought decreases phosphorus availability in an evergreen Mediterranean forest
Title | Increasing drought decreases phosphorus availability in an evergreen Mediterranean forest |
Publication Type | Journal Article |
Year of Publication | 2004 |
Authors | Sardans, J., & Penuelas J. |
Journal | Plant and Soil |
Volume | 267 |
Issue | 1-2 |
Pagination | 367 - 377 |
Date Published | 2004/// |
Keywords | climate change, Drought, Mediterranean ecosystems, mineralomasses, nutrient concentrations, nutrient cycles, phosphorus, Quercus ilex, Soil |
Abstract | Mediterranean ecosystems are water-limited and frequently also nutrient-limited. We aimed to investigate the effects of increasing drought, as predicted by GCM and eco-physiological models for the next decades, on the P cycle and P plant availability in a Mediterranean forest. We conducted a field experiment in a mature evergreen oak forest, establishing four drought-treatment plots and four control plots (150 m2 each). After three years, the runoff and rainfall exclusion reduced an overall 22% the soil moisture, and the runoff exclusion alone reduced it 10%. The reduction of 22% in soil moisture produced a decrease of 40% of the accumulated aboveground plant P content, above all because there was a smaller increase in aerial biomass. The plant leaf P content increased by 100 ± 40 mg m−2 in the control plots, whereas it decreased by 40 ± 40 mg m−2 in the drought plots. The soil Po-NaHCO3 (organic labile-P fraction) increased by 25% in consonance with the increase in litterfall, while the inorganic labile-P fraction decreased in relation to the organic labile-P fraction up to 48%, indicating a decrease in microbial activity. Thus, after just three years of slight drought, a clear trend towards an accumulation of P in the soil and towards a decrease of P in the stand biomass was observed. The P accumulation in the soil in the drought plots was mainly in forms that were not directly available to plants. These indirect effects of drought including the decrease in plant P availability, may |
URL | http://www.springerlink.com/index/10.1007/s11104-005-0172-8 |