• Media type: E-Article
  • Title: The Role of Dissolved Organic Carbon, Dissolved Organic Nitrogen, and Dissolved Inorganic Nitrogen in a Tropical Wet Forest Ecosystem
  • Contributor: Schwendenmann, Luitgard; Veldkamp, Edzo
  • Published: Springer Science+Business Media, 2005
  • Published in: Ecosystems, 8 (2005) 4, Seite 339-351
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 1432-9840; 1435-0629
  • Origination:
  • Footnote:
  • Description: Although tropical wet forests play an important role in the global carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycles, little is known about the origin, composition, and fate of dissolved organic C (DOC) and N (DON) in these ecosystems. We quantified and characterized fluxes of DOC, DON, and dissolved inorganic N (DIN) in throughfall, litter leachate, and soil solution of an old-growth tropical wet forest to assess their contribution to C stabilization (DOC) and to N export (DON and DIN) from this ecosystem. We found that the forest canopy was a major source of DOC (232 kg C${\rm ha}^{-1}\ {\rm y}^{-1}$). Dissolved organic C fluxes decreased with soil depth from 277 kg C${\rm ha}^{-1}\ {\rm y}^{-1}$below the litter layer to around 50 kg C kg C${\rm ha}^{-1}\ {\rm y}^{-1}$between 0.75 and 3.5m depth. Laboratory experiments to quantify biodegradable DOC and DON and to estimate the DOC sorption capacity of the soil, combined with chemical analyses of DOC, revealed that sorption was the dominant process controlling the observed DOC profiles in the soil. This sorption of DOC by the soil matrix has probably led to large soil organic C stores, especially below the rooting zone. Dissolved N fluxes in all strata were dominated by mineral N (mainly${\rm NO}_{3}{}^{-}$). The dominance of${\rm NO}_{3}{}^{-}$relative to the total amount nitrate of N leaching from the soil shows that${\rm NO}_{3}{}^{-}$is dominant not only in forest ecosystems receiving large anthropogenic nitrogen inputs but also in this old-growth forest ecosystem, which is not N-limited.