Porder Stephen, Chadwick Oliver A
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island 02912, USA.
Ecology. 2009 Mar;90(3):623-36. doi: 10.1890/07-1739.1.
Plants and soils represent coevolving components of ecosystems, and while the effects of soils (e.g., nutrient availability) on plants have been extensively documented, the effect of plants on soils has received less attention. Furthermore there has been no systematic investigation of how plant effects vary across important ecological gradients in climate or soil age, which leaves a substantial gap in our understanding of how plant-soil systems develop. In this context, we analyzed changes in nutrient availability and elemental losses from the entire weathering zone at 35 sites arrayed across climatic and soil-age gradients on the island of Hawai'i. The sites are located on three basaltic lava flows (ages 10, 170, and 350 kyr) each of which crosses a precipitation gradient from approximately 500 to 2500 mm/yr. By comparing the loss of nutrient (potassium, phosphorus) and non-nutrient (e.g., sodium) rock-derived elements, we identify a climatic zone at intermediate rainfall where the retention of plant nutrients in the upper soil is most pronounced. We further show that there are several abiotic constraints on plant-driven retention of nutrients. At the dry sites (< or = 750 mm/yr on all three flows), plants slow the loss of nutrients, but the effect (as measured by the difference between K and Na losses) is small, perhaps because of low plant cover and productivity. At intermediate rainfall (750-1400 mm/yr) but negative water balance, plants substantially enrich both nutrient cations and P relative to Na in the surface horizons, an effect that remains strong even after 350 kyr of soil development. In contrast, at high rainfall (> or = 1500 mm/yr) and positive water balance, the effect of plants on nutrient distributions diminishes with soil age as leaching losses overwhelm the uplift and retention of nutrients by plants after 350 kyr of soil development. The effect of plants on soil nutrient distributions can also be mediated by the movement of iron (Fe), and substantial Fe losses at high rainfall on the older flows are highly correlated with P losses. Thus redox-driven redistribution of Fe may place a further abiotic constraint on nutrient retention by plants. In combination, these data indicate that the effects of soil aging on plant uplift and retention of nutrients differ markedly with precipitation, and we view this as a potentially fruitful area for future research.
植物和土壤是生态系统中共同进化的组成部分。虽然土壤对植物的影响(如养分有效性)已有大量文献记载,但植物对土壤的影响却较少受到关注。此外,对于植物影响如何随气候或土壤年龄等重要生态梯度而变化,尚未进行系统研究,这使得我们在理解植物 - 土壤系统如何发展方面存在很大差距。在此背景下,我们分析了夏威夷岛上35个沿气候和土壤年龄梯度分布的地点整个风化带的养分有效性变化和元素损失情况。这些地点位于三条玄武岩熔岩流上(年龄分别为10、170和350千年),每条熔岩流都跨越了从约500到2500毫米/年的降水梯度。通过比较养分(钾、磷)和非养分(如钠)等源自岩石的元素的损失情况,我们确定了一个降雨适中的气候带,在该地带上层土壤中植物养分的保留最为明显。我们进一步表明,植物驱动的养分保留存在多种非生物限制因素。在干旱地区(所有三条熔岩流上的降雨量≤750毫米/年),植物减缓了养分的流失,但这种影响(以钾和钠损失的差值衡量)较小,这可能是由于植物覆盖率低和生产力低下所致。在降雨适中(750 - 1400毫米/年)但水分平衡为负的地区,相对于钠,植物在表层土壤中显著富集了养分阳离子和磷,即使经过35万年的土壤发育,这种影响仍然很强。相比之下,在高降雨量(≥1500毫米/年)且水分平衡为正的地区,经过35万年的土壤发育后,由于淋溶损失超过了植物对养分的提升和保留能力,植物对养分分布的影响随土壤年龄而减弱。植物对土壤养分分布的影响还可能由铁(Fe)的移动介导,在较老熔岩流上高降雨量地区大量的铁流失与磷流失高度相关。因此,氧化还原驱动的铁重新分布可能对植物养分保留施加进一步的非生物限制。综合来看,这些数据表明土壤老化对植物提升和保留养分的影响随降水量有显著差异,我们认为这是未来研究中一个潜在富有成果的领域。