Seasonal partitioning of resource use and constraints on the growth of soil microbes and a forage grass in a grazed Arctic salt-marsh

Date

2009

Authors

Hargreaves, Sarah K.
Horrigan, Emma J.
Jefferies, Robert L.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Abstract

Seasonal growth responses of plants and soil microorganisms to additions of nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P) and carbon (C) were examined in goose-grazed and exclosed plots in an Arctic salt marsh. Plants showed strong growth responses to N and NP additions but not to P. Nitrogen levels in the shoots and roots of Puccinellia phryganodes declined as summer progressed. Microbial biomass was low in spring in spite of N and P additions, likely due to C limitation, but values rose in autumn, independent of nutrient treatment, as dissolved organic carbon (DOC) increased. Glucose addition (C source) elicited a transitory increase in microbial biomass. Multiple plant defoliations by geese had a negative effect on microbial biomass, in spite of the presence of DOC and added N and P, possibly because hypersalinity restricted growth. Plants appear to limit soil inputs of C in summer and compete effectively for resources in contrast to autumn, indicating a temporal partitioning of resources.

Description

Keywords

microbial carbon, plant carbon, microbial and plant carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, seasonal biomass changes, biomass, fertilizer, fertilizer addition, Puccinellia phryganodes, Lesser snow geese, Lesser snow goose, Grazing, Hudson Bay coast, Hudson Bay

Citation

Plant Soil 322 (2009) :279–291