Soil-atmosphere terpene exchanges in the tropical forest of French Guiana with nitrogen and phosphorus fertilizer application

Author

Yang, Kaijun

Llusià, Joan

Mu, Zhaobin

Sardans, Jordi

Preece, Catherine

Filella, Iolanda

Ogaya, Romà

Gargallo-Garriga, Albert

Peguero, Guille

Bréchet, Laëtitia M.

Stahl, Clément

Van Langenhove, Leandro

Verryckt, Lore T.

Vallicrosa, Helena

Márquez, Laura

Fernández, Pere-Roc

Lugli, Laynara

Tan, Yu

Liu, Juxiu

Janssens, Ivan A.

Peñuelas, Josep

Publication date

2025-09-20



Abstract

Background and aims Tropical forest soils can act as sources or sinks of biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs), especially terpenes, yet the impact of long-term nutrient deposition on these fluxes remains unclear. We aimed to assess how nitrogen (N), phosphorus (P), and combined (NP) fertilization affect soil-atmosphere terpene exchanges across seasons and topographical gradients in a tropical forest in French Guiana. Methods We measured net exchange rates of terpenes using dynamic chambers in control and fertilized plots after three years of nutrient addition. Treatments were compared across wet and dry seasons, topographic positions, and under conditions with and without litter. Results Soil exhibited both emission and uptake of terpenes, with marked seasonal patterns. Emissions peaked during the wet season, while uptake was more frequent during the dry season. N fertilization significantly increased monoterpene emissions from litter-covered soils in the wet season and reduced terpene uptake in the dry season. P fertilization weakened monoterpene uptake during the dry season but had limited effects on emissions. Combined NP treatment enhanced overall terpene exchange rates. Topography and litter presence modulated these effects but did not override the dominant influence of fertilization and season. Conclusions Nutrient enrichment alters the magnitude and direction of soil terpene fluxes in tropical forests, with implications for ecosystem functioning and atmospheric chemistry. Our findings underscore the need to incorporate soil BVOC dynamics into models predicting biogeochemical responses to global change.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Accepted version

Language

English

CDU Subject

630 - Forestry

Pages

42

Publisher

Springer

Version of

Plant and Soil

Grant Agreement Number

EC/PF7/610028/EU/Effects of phosphorus limitations on Life, Earth system and Society/IMBALANCE-P

MICINN/Programa Estatal para impulsar la investigación científico-técnica y su transferencia/TED2021-132627B-I00/ES/Desentrañar y aportar soluciones para mitigar y adaptarse a los cambios en los elementomas de los organismos, comunidades y ecosistemas/NUTRIARID

Rights

© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2025

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