Publication Details

Category Text Publication
Reference Category Book chapters
DOI 10.1007/978-3-642-00340-0_13
Title (Primary) Nitrogen and carbon transformations
Title (Secondary) Functioning and management of European beech ecosystems
Author Brumme, R.; Priess, J.A.; Wang, C.P.; Raubuch, M.; Steinmetz, G.; Meyer, H.
Publisher Brumme, R.; Khanna, P.K.
Source Titel Ecological Studies
Year 2009
Department CLE
Volume 208
Page From 231
Page To 251
Language englisch
Abstract Carbon and nitrogen are squantitatively important elements in forest ecosystems. Most of the carbon and nitrogen are stored in the soil and have a long turnover time. Only a small fraction of the N-pool is cycled every year through growth and litter fall and mineralisation of litter. Industrialisation has caused high acid and nitrogen inputs to ecosystems which have affected carbon and nitrogen stocks and mineralisation processes in forest ecosystems. In addition, global change of temperature and precipitation will also have a direct influence on carbon and nitrogen cycles in the short-term and on their stocks in the long-term. In order to detect measurable changes in the carbon and nitrogen stocks of forest soils, several decades and sometimes centuries may be needed because they have by nature high spatial variability and occur in large stocks. Therefore, it is very difficult to obtain information on fluxes of these elements by measuring changes in the bulk stocks. Direct measurements of input and output fluxes may provide useful information to assess any changes of the bulk stocks, and on understanding of human-induced changes in the mineralisation processes, as long as the values of input and output fluxes can be accurately measured.
Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=101
Brumme, R., Priess, J.A., Wang, C.P., Raubuch, M., Steinmetz, G., Meyer, H. (2009):
Nitrogen and carbon transformations
In: Brumme, R., Khanna, P.K. (eds.)
Functioning and management of European beech ecosystems
Ecological Studies 208
Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, p. 231 - 251 10.1007/978-3-642-00340-0_13