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Sulfur, carbon, and nitrogen relationships in forest soils across the northern Great Lakes States as affected by atmospheric deposition and vegetation

Document Type

Article

Journal/Book Title/Conference

Canadian Journal of Forest Research

Volume

18

Issue

11

First Page

1386

Last Page

1391

Publication Date

11-1988

Abstract

Relationships among forest soil carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur, vegetation type, and atmospheric deposition of wet sulfate were tested using 169 forested plots across Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan. Plots were geographically stratified into five zones, with wet sulfate deposition increasing from 156 (zone 1) to 380 (zone 5) equiv.•ha−1 • year−1. Total S concentrations, adjusted for N levels, indicated higher concentrations in eastern than in western zones in both the upper mineral soil (ca. 0.0152 and 0.0133% S, respectively) and forest floor (ca. 0.124 and 0.113% S, respectively). This illustrates that forest soil S levels reflect geographic gradients in atmospheric sulfate deposition. Total C and N concentrations and C:N and C:S ratios were affected by vegetation type. Jack pine and red pine mineral soil had lower concentrations of C and N compared with balsam fir, maple, and aspen. Forest floor C and N showed no clear pattern.

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