During the vegetation periods 1994 and 1995, net uptake of nitrate
and
ammonium by roots of adult spruce (Picea
abies (L.) Karst) and beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) trees was
studied at a
field site exposed to high loads of N
(‘Höglwald’, Germany). In addition, uptake experiments
were carried out under controlled conditions with young
spruce and beech trees grown at normal N supply.
In the field, nitrate was not taken up by the roots of spruce trees
in appreciable amounts. This was also true for
beech except during September 1995. Apparently, beech trees was capable
of taking up nitrate, but the
environmental condition prevailing at the field site usually prevented
net uptake. Net uptake of ammonium in both
tree species showed a seasonal course, with maximum rates in mid summer.
Rates of ammonium uptake by both
species correlated with soil temperature at the field site.
Laboratory experiments on the influence of root temperature on uptake
of nitrate indicated that uptake rates at
temperatures found in the field were low compared with the uptake capacity
at optimum temperature. At
temperatures of 10 and 15°C, frequently found in the soil at the field
site, net uptake of nitrate by spruce and beech
amounted to c. 16% and 11%, respectively, of maximum uptake at
25°C.
By contrast, net uptake of ammonium
at 10°C reached 73% and 31% of the maximum uptake for spruce and
beech trees, respectively. Independent of
temperature, rates of nitrate uptake were considerably lower than
those of ammonium. In young spruce and beech
trees, net uptake of nitrate was significantly inhibited by ammonium at
nitrate[ratio ]ammonium ratios found in the soil
solution at the forest site. Preincubation of roots of both species,
with amino acids present in the phloem of adult
trees at the field site, led to an increase in the amino acid pool in
the roots. For spruce trees a correlation between
inhibition of uptake of nitrate and enrichment of the roots with the
amino compounds Glu, γ-amino butyric acid
(Gaba), Gln, and Asn was observed. In beech trees, enrichment of Asp
and Gln in the roots correlated with a
decrease in net uptake of nitrate. The results of laboratory
experiments on the effects of temperature, the nitrate
to ammonium ratio in the nutrient solution, and amino acid enrichment
in the roots are discussed with special
emphasis on the patterns of net uptake of ammonium and nitrate observed
in the field.