New Zealand Journal of Botany abstracts
The biology of kauri (Agathis australis) in New Zealand II. Nitrogen
cycling in four kauri forest remnants
WARWICK B. SILVESTER
Department of Biological Sciences
The University of Waikato
Private Bag 3105
Hamilton 2001, New Zealand
email: w.silvester@waikato.ac.nz
Abstract Four sites, two of which are dominated by kauri
poles and two dominated by mature kauri trees, were investigated for total
nitrogen content, nitrogen fixation, and nitrogen turnover. All sites have low
foliage nitrogen concentration, and in most cases this is below the critical
deficiency level of 0.81-0.92% N. Leaves may be retained on trees for up to 12
years and contain decreasing amounts of nitrogen as they age. Above-ground
kauri biomass contains from 61 kg N ha
-1 in a young pole stand
to 900 kg N ha
-1 in a mature stand. A large amount of nitrogen
is contained in the forest floor, with up to 6.5 t N ha
-1 in the
mature forest site. Mean residence time for nitrogen ranges from 9 to 192
years. Total ecosystem nitrogen of as much as 14 t ha
-1 was recorded
in the oldest site, representing an extreme level of N storage and
immobilisation. Nitrogen fixation by free living heterotrophs in decaying
litter can account for at least 5 kg N ha
-1 yr
-1,
which, when integrated over the life of the forest, accounts for the large
build-up in ecosystem N. Nitrogen use efficiency averages 155 g dry matter
per g N, which is almost twice that of other forests reported. Overall
N-cycling models are produced for the two mature kauri sites and show that only
0.3% and 0.7% of total ecosystem N is mobilised in any year. There is a close
linear relationship between both stem productivity and litter production and
maximum foliage N in any stand and this has important implications for
management of kauri forest.
Keywords Agathis australis; kauri; nitrogen; nitrogen
cycling; nitrogen fixation; nitrogenase; immobilisation; nitrogen use
efficiency
B98068
Received 4 December 1998; accepted 1 November 1999
PDF file of entire paper: medium quality (928K); (scanned from paper original: notes about this process)
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