Nutrient deficiency enhances the rate of short-term belowground transfer of nitrogen from Acacia mangium to Eucalyptus trees in mixed-species plantations
2021
Oliveira, I.R. | Bordron, B. | Laclau, J.P. | Paula, R.R. | Ferraz, A.V. | Gonçalves, J.L.M. | Maire, G. le | Bouillet, J.P.
While a recent study showed that significant amounts of the nitrogen (N) requirements of young Eucalyptus trees can be provided by nitrogen-fixing trees (NFTs) in mixed-species plantations through short-term belowground N transfer, the consequences of soil fertility on this facilitation process remain unknown. We assessed the effect of fertilization on the percentage of N derived from transfer (%NDFT) from Acacia mangium trees to Eucalyptus trees in mixed-species plantations. A complete randomized block design with two treatments (fertilized vs unfertilized) and three blocks was set up in mixed-species plantations of A. mangium and Eucalyptus in Brazil, with 50% of each species at 2.5 m × 2.5 m spacing. Collection of litterfall and forest floor made it possible to estimate the annual N release from forest floor decomposition between 46 and 58 months after planting, close to harvest age. ¹⁵N-NO₃⁻ was injected into the stem of one dominant Acacia tree in each plot, 58 months after planting. The x(¹⁵N) values of Acacia and Eucalyptus fine roots sampled within 1.8 m of the labelled A. mangium tree were determined at 7, 14, 30 and 60 days after labelling. The x(¹⁵N) values in wood, bark, branch and leaf samples were also determined for the 6 labelled Acacia trees and their two closest Eucalyptus neighbours, just before and 60 days after labelling. The amount of N released from forest floor decomposition was 31% higher in fertilized (F+) than in unfertilized (F-) plots. Sixty days after labelling, the aboveground compartments of Eucalyptus trees were significantly ¹⁵N enriched in both treatments. The x(¹⁵N) values of Acacia fine roots were higher than background values from 7 days after labelling onwards in F+ and 30 days after labelling in F-. The x(¹⁵N) values of Eucalyptus fine roots were higher than background values in both treatments, from 30 days after labelling onwards. Mean %NDFT values were 18.0% in F+ and 33.9% in F- over the first 60 days after labelling, and 22.8% in F+ and 67.7% in F- from 30 to 60 days after labelling. Fertilization decreased short-term transfer belowground of N from Acacia trees to Eucalyptus trees. Our study suggests that belowground facilitation processes providing N from NFTs to Eucalyptus trees in mixed-species plantations are more pronounced in low-fertility soils than in nutrient-supplied stands.
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