News Release

Phosphorus cycle process in the subtropical masson pine plantation with increasing forest age

Peer-Reviewed Publication

KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.

EFFECTS OF PHOSPHORUS RESORPTION ON BIOACTIVE PHOSPHORUS OF DIFFERENT-AGED PINUS MASSONIANA PLANTATIONS

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Effects of phosphorus resorption on bioactive phosphorus of different-aged Pinus massoniana plantations

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Credit: Xue, X. P., et al.

Phosphorus (P) is an important nutrient element in plant photosynthesis. However, the adsorption of mineral P via leaching and erosion leads to a decrease in P availability and consequently P deficiency.

In a study published in the journal Forest Ecosystems, a team of researchers from China elucidated a mechanism for phosphorus cycling in subtropical forests. They found that as stand age increases, bioavailable phosphorus in Pinus massoniana plantations gets absorbed by roots under the influence of soil phosphatases. This phosphorus is then allocated to roots and leaves in various organ phosphorus component forms, with this relationship exhibiting seasonal variations.

"The phosphorus cycle within the above-ground and below-ground environments of subtropical forests variesacross different stands, ages and seasons," shares corresponding author Xiaogai Ge from the Institute of Forestry Engineering, Chinese Academy of Forestry. “As stand age increases, Pinus massoniana consistently absorbs bioavailable phosphorus from the soil, resulting in a reduction in soil phosphorus availability within Pinus massoniana plantations.”

The absorbed phosphorus is then distributed to various organs in four distinct forms: metabolic phosphorus, nucleic acid phosphorus, lipid phosphorus, and residual phosphorus.

“This distribution is influenced by phosphorus resorption,” adds Ge. “Phosphorus in these organs eventually returns to the soil through litterfall, thereby mitigating the decline in soil phosphorus availability due to the activity of soil phosphatases.”

The research team also observed that the proportion of metabolic P in leaves initially increased but subsequently decreased with the stand age of Pinus massoniana throughout the growing season, resulting in a metabolic P proportion of 34–68% in litter. During the non-growing season, the primary alteration in the P components of Pinus massoniana fine roots was a shift from metabolic P to residual P. 

“Compared to the growing season, soil ligand P fractions decreased by 7–22% and exchangeable P fractions increased by 0–16% during the non-growing season,” says Ge. “The organ P components tended to decrease with increasing stand age, primarily due to the gradual reduction in soil-bioavailable P, a trend that was mitigated by litter input.”

The production of dissolved P by soil phosphatases would somewhat limit the reduction in soil-bioavailable P caused by leaf P resorption. The variations in leaf organ P components between the growing and non-growing seasons are attributed to the allocation of P by the Pinus massoniana.

The primary significance of the team’s findings lies in their potential to offer a theoretical foundation for the management practices of Pinus massoniana plantations, enhancing productivity across various stand ages in subtropical plantations.

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Contact the author: Xiaogai Ge, Research Institute of Subtropical Forestry, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, 311400, China

The publisher KeAi was established by Elsevier and China Science Publishing & Media Ltd to unfold quality research globally. In 2013, our focus shifted to open access publishing. We now proudly publish more than 100 world-class, open access, English language journals, spanning all scientific disciplines. Many of these are titles we publish in partnership with prestigious societies and academic institutions, such as the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC).


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