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PNAS
Vol.104, No.18 , 2007, Pages:
7466–7470

Changes in nitrogen cycling during the past century
in a northern hardwood forest

Kendra K. McLauchlan*†, Joseph M. Craine*, W. Wyatt Oswald‡, Peter R. Leavitt§, and Gene E. Likens†¶


Abstract

Nitrogen (N) availability, defined here as the supply of N to terrestrial plants and soil microorganisms relative to their N demands, limits the productivity of many temperate zone forests and in part determines ecosystem carbon (C) content. Despite multidecadal monitoring of N in streams, the long-term record of N availability in forests of the northeastern United States is largely unknown. Therefore, although these forests have been receiving anthropogenic N deposition for the past few decades, it is still uncertain whether terrestrial N availability has changed during this time and, subsequently, whether forest ecosystems have responded to increased N deposition. Here, we used stable N isotopes in tree rings and lake sediments to demonstrate that N availability in a northeastern forest has declined over the past 75 years, likely because of ecosystem recovery from Euro-American land use. Forest N availability has only recently returned to levels forecast from presettlement trajectories, rendering the trajectory of future forest N cycling uncertain. Our results suggest that chronic disturbances caused by humans, especially logging and agriculture, are major drivers of terrestrial N cycling in forest ecosystems today, even a century after cessation.

Keywords:15N , land-use history , Mirror Lake , nitrogen availability , paleoecology, Organis farming.


Corresponding author: Phone:xxxxxxxxxxx Fax: xxxxxxxxxxx.

E-mail: kendra.mclauchlan@dartmouth.edu or likensg@ecostudies.org.

 

 
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