Project Details
Phosphorus cycling in grasslands and forests of differing diversity and land use
Applicant
Professorin Dr. Yvonne Oelmann
Subject Area
Soil Sciences
Term
from 2008 to 2018
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 60966032
Increasingly efficient nutrient exploitation with increasing plant diversity results in lower nutrient concentrations in soil solution. This has been shown for N but not for other important nutrients such as P. In managed ecosystems, diversity is closely linked to land-use intensity and history. To understand the controls of nutrient concentrations in soil the land-use and biodiversity effects must be disentangled. Therefore, we propose to study the effect of land use and biodiversity on P cycling in grassland and forest systems of the three biodiversity exploratories. Our objective is to disentangle the effect of land use and plant diversity on 1) P in soil (total, inorganic, and organic), 2) P release in soil (dissolution of P minerals and mineralization of organic matter), and 3) P in plants in all intensively studied subplots of each exploratory (grasslands and forests). Furthermore, we will assess the influence of land-use practices on P in soil by using novel isotope techniques, i.e. the determination of d18O in phosphates. We will determine P pools in soil and plant biomass, P release by dissolution and mineralization, and the isotopic signature (d18O) in phosphate extracted from soil.
DFG Programme
Infrastructure Priority Programmes
Subproject of
SPP 1374:
Biodiversity Exploratories