Walker and Syers enter the critical zone: Integrating decadal scale root
development with longer term soil development to understand terrestrial
nutrient cycling
Abstract
Most terrestrial nutrient sources are hypothesized to shift in dominance
from mineral- to organic matter (OM)-derived over millennia. We
investigated how overlaying this hypothesis with plant rooting dynamics
that can feedback to soil development offers insight into ecosystem
functioning. To test the hypothesis that the nutritional importance of
OM as mineral weathering proceeds is mediated by rooting system nutrient
economies that vary with vegetation development, we paired litterfall
decay experiments with soil mineralogical data from diverse forests
across the Critical Zone (CZ) Observatory Network. We demonstrate that
sources of phosphorus shift from OM-bound stocks to minerals as the
rooting zone expands during the transition from mid to late stages of
forest growth. Root-driven, plant-soil feedbacks thus can prompt
inconsistencies with soil development models that posit a unidirectional
transition from mineral to organic nutrient dominance, and illuminate
how forest growth and land use influence nutrient bioavailability in
Earth’s CZ.