Authors
Melanie A Vile, R Kelman Wieder, Tatjana Živković, Kimberli D Scott, Dale H Vitt, Jeremy A Hartsock, Christine L Iosue, James C Quinn, Meaghan Petix, Hope M Fillingim, Jacqueline MA Popma, Katherine A Dynarski, Todd R Jackman, Cara M Albright, Dennis D Wykoff
Publication date
2014/11
Journal
Biogeochemistry
Volume
121
Pages
317-328
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Description
Symbiotic relationships between N2-fixing prokaryotes and their autotrophic hosts are essential in nitrogen (N)-limited ecosystems, yet the importance of this association in pristine boreal peatlands, which store 25 % of the world’s soil (C), has been overlooked. External inputs of N to bogs are predominantly atmospheric, and given that regions of boreal Canada anchor some of the lowest rates found globally (~1 kg N ha−1 year−1), biomass production is thought to be limited primarily by N. Despite historically low N deposition, we show that boreal bogs have accumulated approximately 12–25 times more N than can be explained by atmospheric inputs. Here we demonstrate high rates of biological N2-fixation in prokaryotes associated with Sphagnum mosses that can fully account for the missing input of N needed to sustain high rates of C sequestration. Additionally, N amendment experiments in the field did …
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