Boom and bust carbon-nitrogen dynamics during reforestation

dc.contributor.author

Parolari, AJ

dc.contributor.author

Mobley, ML

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Bacon, AR

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Katul, GG

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Richter, DDB

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Porporato, A

dc.date.accessioned

2020-08-01T15:52:41Z

dc.date.available

2020-08-01T15:52:41Z

dc.date.issued

2017-09-24

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2020-08-01T15:52:41Z

dc.description.abstract

© 2017 Elsevier B.V. Legacies of historical land use strongly shape contemporary ecosystem dynamics. In old-field secondary forests, tree growth embodies a legacy of soil changes affected by previous cultivation. Three patterns of biomass accumulation during reforestation have been hypothesized previously, including monotonic to steady state, non-monotonic with a single peak then decay to steady state, and multiple oscillations around the steady state. In this paper, the conditions leading to the emergence of these patterns is analyzed. Using observations and models, we demonstrate that divergent reforestation patterns can be explained by contrasting time-scales in ecosystem carbon-nitrogen cycles that are influenced by land use legacies. Model analyses characterize non-monotonic plant-soil trajectories as either single peaks or multiple oscillations during an initial transient phase controlled by soil carbon-nitrogen conditions at the time of planting. Oscillations in plant and soil pools appear in modeled systems with rapid tree growth and low initial soil nitrogen, which stimulate nitrogen competition between trees and decomposers and lead the forest into a state of acute nitrogen deficiency. High initial soil nitrogen dampens oscillations, but enhances the magnitude of the tree biomass peak. These model results are supported by data derived from the long-running Calhoun Long-Term Soil-Ecosystem Experiment from 1957 to 2007. Observed carbon and nitrogen pools reveal distinct tree growth and decay phases, coincident with soil nitrogen depletion and partial re-accumulation. Further, contemporary tree biomass loss decreases with the legacy soil C:N ratio. These results support the idea that non-monotonic reforestation trajectories may result from initial transients in the plant-soil system affected by initial conditions derived from soil changes associated with land-use history.

dc.identifier.issn

0304-3800

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1872-7026

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21238

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en

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Elsevier BV

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Ecological Modelling

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10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2017.06.023

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Science & Technology

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Life Sciences & Biomedicine

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Ecology

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Environmental Sciences & Ecology

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Reforestation

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Nutrient cycling

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Soil nitrogen

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Plant-soil feedbacks

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Dynamical systems

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Land use legacy

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SOIL CARBON

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LONG-TERM

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PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY

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MANAGED FORESTS

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USE EFFICIENCY

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CLIMATE-CHANGE

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PINE FOREST

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MODEL

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ECOSYSTEM

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ACCUMULATION

dc.title

Boom and bust carbon-nitrogen dynamics during reforestation

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Katul, GG|0000-0001-9768-3693

pubs.begin-page

108

pubs.end-page

119

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Nicholas School of the Environment

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Civil and Environmental Engineering

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Marine Science and Conservation

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Environmental Sciences and Policy

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Duke

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Pratt School of Engineering

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

360

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