Retention of deposited ammonium and nitrate and its impact on the global forest carbon sink

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Abstract

The impacts of enhanced nitrogen (N) deposition on the global forest carbon (C) sink and other ecosystem services may depend on whether N is deposited in reduced (mainly as ammonium) or oxidized forms (mainly as nitrate) and the subsequent fate of each. However, the fates of the two key reactive N forms and their contributions to forest C sinks are unclear. Here, we analyze results from 13 ecosystem-scale paired 15N-labelling experiments in temperate, subtropical, and tropical forests. Results show that total ecosystem N retention is similar for ammonium and nitrate, but plants take up more labelled nitrate (201525%) (meanminimummaximum) than ammonium (12816%) while soils retain more ammonium (574965%) than nitrate (463259%). We estimate that the N deposition-induced C sink in forests in the 2010s is 0.720.490.96 Pg C yr−1, higher than previous estimates because of a larger role for oxidized N and greater rates of global N deposition.

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Gurmesa, G. A., Wang, A., Li, S., Peng, S., de Vries, W., Gundersen, P., … Fang, Y. (2022). Retention of deposited ammonium and nitrate and its impact on the global forest carbon sink. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28345-1

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