Comparing the use of leaf and soil analysis as N and P availability indices in a wildfire chronosequence
Date
2012Abstract
Two types of measures have traditionally been
used to monitor changes after disturbances in the nutrient
availability of forest ecosystems: (1) soil nutrient pools and
transformation rates and (2) foliar nutrient content. We
used a wildfire chronosequence in natural and unmanaged
Pinus canariensis forests to determine which kind of
measure is more effective in discriminating between disturbed
and undisturbed plots and to determine whether the
different availability indices provide comparable and consistent
results within the chronosequence and between
different sampling dates. The results showed that (1) foliar
N and P concentrations were the variables that best discriminated
between the plots of the chronosequence, (2) the
various soil N availability indices neither showed steady
relationships nor predicted the plant nutrient availability,
and (3) P availability indices showed steady relationships
and predicted plant nutrient availability. Due to the
changing nature of the soil N pools, repeated sampling over
a long period of time could yield results different from
those presented here. However, the large sampling effort
required would favor the use of foliar nutrient
concentrations as the most desirable first approach to the
community’s nutritional status, especially when time or
budget constraints are relevant.