1998
DOI: 10.1016/s0378-1127(97)00126-6
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Vegetation and soil biota response to experimentally-changed nitrogen inputs in coniferous forest ecosystems of the NITREX project

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Cited by 134 publications
(80 citation statements)
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“…Some other studies showed that soil respiration would be suppressed under N addition (Boxman et al, 1998;Mo et al, 2008). However, the repeated measures ANOVA in our study showed that a positive effect on soil respiration existed in the NN treatment, which may primarily owe to N addition stimulating soil respiration rate at the very start of the experiment.…”
Section: Effect Of N Addition On Soil Respirationcontrasting
confidence: 66%
“…Some other studies showed that soil respiration would be suppressed under N addition (Boxman et al, 1998;Mo et al, 2008). However, the repeated measures ANOVA in our study showed that a positive effect on soil respiration existed in the NN treatment, which may primarily owe to N addition stimulating soil respiration rate at the very start of the experiment.…”
Section: Effect Of N Addition On Soil Respirationcontrasting
confidence: 66%
“…Increasing N deposition even decreased concentrations of P in spruce (-20%, P<0.01) and beech (-15%, P<0.01). This suggests that elevated N deposition induced a P limitation, which is in accordance with increased N/P ratios and lower P concentrations under elevated N depositions in mature forests (Aber et al 1989;Boxman et al 1998). Another reason for the lacking interaction between CO 2 × N could be that the addition of 5-7 g N m -2 a -1 did not remove N limitation completely in the acidic loam, as suggested by negligible effects of elevated N deposition on concentrations of dissolved N in the soil solution at 25 cm and deeper in the soil (see Table 3 for 50 cm depth).…”
Section: Soil-dependent Co 2 Effects On Nutrient Accumulation In Beecmentioning
confidence: 54%
“…Effluxes of NO and N 2 O also may increase because of nitrification or denitrification processes (Davidson et al 2000), which may become significant if soils are imperfectly or variably drained soils. In stage 3, experimental additions of Nr may decrease tree growth (e.g., Magill et al 2000), while decreases in Nr deposition may increase tree growth (Beier et al 1998, Boxman et al 1998. Excess Nr may damage forests by causing nutrient imbalances and by increasing sensitivity to factors such as frost and attacks by fungi (Erisman and de Vries 2000).…”
Section: Terrestrial Ecosystemsmentioning
confidence: 99%