It seems strange that we are learning
things like this only now. This mocks
the miles of scientific opinion produced on forests and soils over the past
century. What is suggested here is that
an ecosystem left on it own will reach a stable condition is which ample
nitrogen will be retained in the living biomass to the extent that it is topped
up excessively by lightening and related rainfall which then generates surplus
nitrogen being exported.
We need to more clearly
understand the biological pathways and be prepared to apply them to
agriculture.
As my readers understand, we have
extensively discussed the production of a living soil through the application
of biochar in particular. Biochar
captures nitrogen and other soluble nutrients otherwise released into the
ground water. This makes it easy to
develop a sustaining living soil base for agriculture as was proven in the Amazon
with the terra preta soils.
What this strongly suggests is
that it may be possible and certainly desirable to operate working soils in
such a way that they may even become nitrogen positive over their annual
cycle. This may be optimistic but I
think we should strive for such an outcome.
Our ultimate objective is produce
working soils anywhere and having them become nutrient neutral. This ultimately requires a soil capacity to
store nutrients in place for use even years later. Biochar provides just that.
Team finds natural reasons behind nitrogen-rich forests
by Staff Writers
Many tropical forests are extremely rich in nitrogen even when there
are no farms or industries nearby, says Montana State
University researcher
Jack Brookshire.
It's because of biological interactions that occur naturally in the
forests, Brookshire and four colleagues said in a paper they published Jan. 15
in the online version of the journal Nature Geoscience.
Disputing some long-held beliefs about high nitrogen levels in tropical
forests, Brookshire said pollution isn't always the reason behind it. It can
also be caused by natural interactions between the forest and nutrient cycles.
Brookshire and his team suggested that in mountainous tropical forests,
nitrogen availability may not limit plant
growth or its response to higher carbon dioxide levels in the
atmosphere.
Brookshire began his study in 2006 when he was a postdoctoral
researcher at Princeton
University . He continued
it after moving to MSU in 2009. He is now an assistant professor in the
Department of Land Resources and Environmental Sciences.
To conduct their study, Brookshire, two scientists from Princeton
University and two researchers from the Stroud Water Research Center in
Avondale, Pa., used data collected between 1990 and 2008 to examine the
concentration of dissolved nitrogen compounds and
the isotopic composition of nitrate in streams in six mountain forests in Costa
Rica and 55 mountain forests across Central American and the Caribbean.
All of the forests were old-growth tropical forests with no signs of
large-scale disturbance. They were classified as mountain evergreen, mountain
rainforest or cloud forest.
Evergreen forests in Costa
Rica are at lower altitudes. Rainforests are
at higher elevations. Cloud forests are at the highest elevation. They are
bathed in clouds or moisture for much of the year.
The researchers also examined new samples that Brookshire collected in Costa Rica and Trinidad .
Sampling was an exciting process that involved hiking through thick forests and
swimming through narrow rock gorges, Brookshire said. He was able to avoid
snake bites, but not the stinging insects or oppressive humidity.
"You don't dry out," Brookshire said.
The research team found high levels of nitrate in the streams of the
tropical forests, indicating large losses of bioavailable nitrogen, Brookshire
said. They also found evidence that the loss wasn't recent or a one-time thing.
They discovered that the nitrate resulted from plant-soil interactions and not
directly from atmospheric deposition.
Tropical forests are significant reservoirs for carbon, and their
future relies on forest interactions with nutrient cycles,
he said.
Scientists in the past have compared the effect of industry and
agriculture on the temperate forests of the northern hemisphere, but relatively
little research has been conducted on forests near the equator, Brookshire
said.
He decided to look at forests in Costa
Rica and Trinidad
because he already had colleagues there and they, like him, were intrigued by
the fact that some tropical forests have dramatic nitrogen exports without
apparent human causes.
"These systems have
a natural capacity to build up levels of nitrates in soil that we only see in
the most polluted temperate forests," Brookshire said.
The research published in Nature Geoscience will continue, Brookshire
said.
"This is an on-going research project to figure out how forests
work in the larger earth climate
system and how they might respond to global change," Brookshire said.
"The deep mysteries about how these ecosystems work, we are just beginning
to understand. Things are much more complex than previously thought."
Co-authors on the Nature Geoscience paper were Lars Hedin and Daniel
Sigman at Princeton University , and Denis Newbold and John Jackson from
the Stroud Water Research
Center . Their research
was supported by grants from the A.W. Mellon Foundation, the National Science
Foundation, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and research
endowments at Stroud.
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