The low plant productivity of boreal forests in general has been attributed to low soil N supply and low temperatures. Exceptionally
high productivity occurs in toe-slope positions, and has been ascribed to influx of N from surrounding areas and higher rates
of soil N turnover in situ. Despite large apparent natural variations in forest productivity, rates of gross soil N mineralization
and gross nitrification have never been compared in Fennoscandian boreal forests of contrasting productivity. We report contrasting
patterns of soil N turnover in three model ecosystems, representing the range in soil C-to-N ratios (19–41) in Fennoscandian
boreal forests and differences in forest productivity by a factor close to 3. Gross N mineralization was seven times higher
when soil, microbial, and plant C-to-N ratios were the lowest compared to the highest. This process, nitrification and potential
denitrification correlated with inorganic, total and microbial biomass N, but not microbial C. There was a constant ratio
between soil and microbial C-to-N ratio of 3.7±0.2, across wide ratios of soil C-to-N and fungi-to-bacteria. Soil N-cycling
should be controlled by the supplies of C and N to the microbes. In accordance with plant allocation theory, we discuss the
possibility that the high fungal biomass at high soil C-to-N ratio reflects a particularly high supply of plant photosynthates,
substrates of high-quality C, to mycorrhizal fungi. Methods to study soil N turnover and N retention should be developed to
take into account the impact of mycorrhizal fungi on soil N-cycling.
Keywords C-to-N stoichiometry - Forest productivity - Gross N turnover - Mycorrhizal fungi
Communicated by Christian Koerner