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Nitrogen uptake and allocation estimates for Spartina alterniflora and Distichlis spicata.


ABSTRACT: Salt marshes have the potential to intercept nitrogen that could otherwise impact coastal water quality. Salt marsh plants play a central role in nutrient interception by retaining N in above- and belowground tissues. We examine N uptake and allocation in two dominant salt marsh plants, short-form Spartina alterniflora and Distichlis spicata. Nitrogen uptake was measured using 15N tracer experiments conducted over a four-week period, supplemented with stem-level growth rates, primary production, and microbial denitrification assays. By varying experiment duration, we identify the importance of a rarely-measured aspect of experimental design in 15N tracer studies. Experiment duration had a greater impact on quantitative N uptake estimates than primary production or stem-level relative growth rates. Rapid initial scavenging of added 15N caused apparent nitrogen uptake rates to decline by a factor of two as experiment duration increased from one week to one month, although each experiment shared the qualitative conclusion that Distichlis roots scavenged N approximately twice as rapidly as Spartina. We estimate total N uptake into above- and belowground tissues as 154 and 277 mg N·m-2·d-1 for Spartina and Distichlis, respectively. Driving this pattern were higher N content in Distichlis leaves and belowground tissue and strong differences in primary production; Spartina and Distichlis produced 8.8 and 14.7 g biomass·m-2·d-1. Denitrification potentials were similar in sediment associated with both species, but the strong species-specific difference in N uptake suggests that Distichlis-dominated marshes are likely to intercept more N from coastal waters than are short-form Spartina marshes. The data and source code for this manuscript are available as an R package from https://github.com/troyhill/NitrogenUptake2016.

SUBMITTER: Hill TD 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6621564 | biostudies-literature | 2018

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Nitrogen uptake and allocation estimates for <i>Spartina alterniflora</i> and <i>Distichlis spicata</i>.

Hill Troy D TD   Sommer Nathalie R NR   Kanaskie Caroline R CR   Santos Emily A EA   Oczkowski Autumn J AJ  

Journal of experimental marine biology and ecology 20180101


Salt marshes have the potential to intercept nitrogen that could otherwise impact coastal water quality. Salt marsh plants play a central role in nutrient interception by retaining N in above- and belowground tissues. We examine N uptake and allocation in two dominant salt marsh plants, short-form <i>Spartina alterniflora</i> and <i>Distichlis spicata</i>. Nitrogen uptake was measured using <sup>15</sup>N tracer experiments conducted over a four-week period, supplemented with stem-level growth r  ...[more]

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