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Grazing and topography control nutrient pools in low Arctic soils of Southwest Greenland

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Grazing and topography control nutrient pools in low Arctic soils of Southwest Greenland. / van Soest, Maud A. J.; Anderson, N. John; Bol, Roland et al.
In: European Journal of Soil Science, Vol. 73, No. 4, e13278, 31.07.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

van Soest, MAJ, Anderson, NJ, Bol, R, Dixon, LR & Haygarth, PM 2022, 'Grazing and topography control nutrient pools in low Arctic soils of Southwest Greenland', European Journal of Soil Science, vol. 73, no. 4, e13278. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejss.13278

APA

van Soest, M. A. J., Anderson, N. J., Bol, R., Dixon, L. R., & Haygarth, P. M. (2022). Grazing and topography control nutrient pools in low Arctic soils of Southwest Greenland. European Journal of Soil Science, 73(4), Article e13278. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejss.13278

Vancouver

van Soest MAJ, Anderson NJ, Bol R, Dixon LR, Haygarth PM. Grazing and topography control nutrient pools in low Arctic soils of Southwest Greenland. European Journal of Soil Science. 2022 Jul 31;73(4):e13278. Epub 2022 Jul 24. doi: 10.1111/ejss.13278

Author

van Soest, Maud A. J. ; Anderson, N. John ; Bol, Roland et al. / Grazing and topography control nutrient pools in low Arctic soils of Southwest Greenland. In: European Journal of Soil Science. 2022 ; Vol. 73, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{50ef985ddb824149a3da9ece2fecb6e8,
title = "Grazing and topography control nutrient pools in low Arctic soils of Southwest Greenland",
abstract = "Soil nutrient pools in the dry low Arctic are likely to be released under climatic change and this bioavailability has the potential to increase both terrestrial and aquatic productions. As well as the direct effect of warming, external disturbances such as nutrient deposition and grazing can also drive ecosystem change. This study in the low Arctic Kangerlussuaq area of southwest Greenland compared soil nutrient pools in terms of both topographic position on a catena and by soil depth in two small catchments with contrasting muskox abundance. We tested the hypotheses that there were differences between soil carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) across a soil catena (ridge ‐ slope ‐ valley) and by soil depth (litter ‐ 0–5 cm ‐ 25–30 cm) for the two sites (SS17b, muskox present, versus ‐ SS85, no muskox). Total C and N concentrations of soils were on average lower at SS17b compared to SS85. Moreover, the soil N concentration increased downslope in the catena with higher amounts in the valleys compared to the slopes and ridges. Soil P concentration (0.70 g P kg−1) was similar between catchments; however, litter P content was substantially different. The difference in soil nutrients between the two catchments was most likely due to the presence of muskox at SS17b, and hence grazing associated processes (defecation, altered microbiology and nutrient cycling). This study emphasises the heterogeneity of arctic landscapes and need for ecosystem specific research. Highlights: Soil nutrient pools in two low‐arctic catchments in Greenland were compared. Grazing and dung inputs by muskox affect soil nutrient pools in Greenland. Soil P stores in Kangerlussuaq are similar to intensively managed farmland in Europe. The heterogeneity of arctic landscapes and need for ecosystem‐specific research are emphasised.",
keywords = "carbon, muskox, nitrogen, nutrients, phosphorus",
author = "{van Soest}, {Maud A. J.} and Anderson, {N. John} and Roland Bol and Dixon, {Liz R.} and Haygarth, {Philip M.}",
year = "2022",
month = jul,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1111/ejss.13278",
language = "English",
volume = "73",
journal = "European Journal of Soil Science",
issn = "1351-0754",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Grazing and topography control nutrient pools in low Arctic soils of Southwest Greenland

AU - van Soest, Maud A. J.

AU - Anderson, N. John

AU - Bol, Roland

AU - Dixon, Liz R.

AU - Haygarth, Philip M.

PY - 2022/7/31

Y1 - 2022/7/31

N2 - Soil nutrient pools in the dry low Arctic are likely to be released under climatic change and this bioavailability has the potential to increase both terrestrial and aquatic productions. As well as the direct effect of warming, external disturbances such as nutrient deposition and grazing can also drive ecosystem change. This study in the low Arctic Kangerlussuaq area of southwest Greenland compared soil nutrient pools in terms of both topographic position on a catena and by soil depth in two small catchments with contrasting muskox abundance. We tested the hypotheses that there were differences between soil carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) across a soil catena (ridge ‐ slope ‐ valley) and by soil depth (litter ‐ 0–5 cm ‐ 25–30 cm) for the two sites (SS17b, muskox present, versus ‐ SS85, no muskox). Total C and N concentrations of soils were on average lower at SS17b compared to SS85. Moreover, the soil N concentration increased downslope in the catena with higher amounts in the valleys compared to the slopes and ridges. Soil P concentration (0.70 g P kg−1) was similar between catchments; however, litter P content was substantially different. The difference in soil nutrients between the two catchments was most likely due to the presence of muskox at SS17b, and hence grazing associated processes (defecation, altered microbiology and nutrient cycling). This study emphasises the heterogeneity of arctic landscapes and need for ecosystem specific research. Highlights: Soil nutrient pools in two low‐arctic catchments in Greenland were compared. Grazing and dung inputs by muskox affect soil nutrient pools in Greenland. Soil P stores in Kangerlussuaq are similar to intensively managed farmland in Europe. The heterogeneity of arctic landscapes and need for ecosystem‐specific research are emphasised.

AB - Soil nutrient pools in the dry low Arctic are likely to be released under climatic change and this bioavailability has the potential to increase both terrestrial and aquatic productions. As well as the direct effect of warming, external disturbances such as nutrient deposition and grazing can also drive ecosystem change. This study in the low Arctic Kangerlussuaq area of southwest Greenland compared soil nutrient pools in terms of both topographic position on a catena and by soil depth in two small catchments with contrasting muskox abundance. We tested the hypotheses that there were differences between soil carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) across a soil catena (ridge ‐ slope ‐ valley) and by soil depth (litter ‐ 0–5 cm ‐ 25–30 cm) for the two sites (SS17b, muskox present, versus ‐ SS85, no muskox). Total C and N concentrations of soils were on average lower at SS17b compared to SS85. Moreover, the soil N concentration increased downslope in the catena with higher amounts in the valleys compared to the slopes and ridges. Soil P concentration (0.70 g P kg−1) was similar between catchments; however, litter P content was substantially different. The difference in soil nutrients between the two catchments was most likely due to the presence of muskox at SS17b, and hence grazing associated processes (defecation, altered microbiology and nutrient cycling). This study emphasises the heterogeneity of arctic landscapes and need for ecosystem specific research. Highlights: Soil nutrient pools in two low‐arctic catchments in Greenland were compared. Grazing and dung inputs by muskox affect soil nutrient pools in Greenland. Soil P stores in Kangerlussuaq are similar to intensively managed farmland in Europe. The heterogeneity of arctic landscapes and need for ecosystem‐specific research are emphasised.

KW - carbon

KW - muskox

KW - nitrogen

KW - nutrients

KW - phosphorus

U2 - 10.1111/ejss.13278

DO - 10.1111/ejss.13278

M3 - Journal article

VL - 73

JO - European Journal of Soil Science

JF - European Journal of Soil Science

SN - 1351-0754

IS - 4

M1 - e13278

ER -