Variation in the stable N isotope ratio (δ
15N) of plants and soils often reflects the influence of environment on the N cycle. We measured leaf δ
15N and N concentration ([N]) on all individuals of
Prosopis glandulosa (deciduous tree legume),
Condalia hookeri (evergreen shrub), and
Zanthoxylum fagara (evergreen shrub) present within a belt transect 308 m long × 12 m wide in a subtropical savanna ecosystem in southern Texas,
USA in April and August 2005. Soil texture, gravimetric water content (GWC), total N and δ
15N were also measured along the transect. At the landscape scale, leaf δ
15N was negatively related to elevation for all the three species along this topoedaphic sequence. Changes in soil δ
15N, total N, and GWC appeared to contribute to this spatial pattern of leaf δ
15N. In lower portions of the landscape, greater soil N availability and GWC are associated with relatively high rates of both
N mineralization and nitrification. Both soil δ
15N and leaf [N] were positively correlated with leaf δ
15N of non-N
2 fixing plants. Leaf δ
15N of
P. glandulosa, an N
2-fixing legume, did not correlate with leaf [N]; the δ
15N of
P. glandulosa’s leaves were closer to atmospheric N
2 and significantly lower than those of
C. hookeri and
Z. fagara. Additionally, at smaller spatial scales, a proximity index (which reflected the density and distance of surrounding
P. glandulosa trees) was negatively correlated with leaf δ
15N of
C. hookeri and
Z. fagara, indicating the N
2-fixing
P. glandulosa may be important to the N nutrition of nearby non-N
2-fixing species. Our results indicate plant
15N natural abundance can reflect the extent of N retention and help us better understand N dynamics and plant-soil interactions
at ecosystem and landscape scales.
Keywords Nitrogen isotope discrimination - Nitrogen cycling - Dinitrogen fixation - Spatial scale - Nitrogen availability
Communicated by John Ehleringer.