Potential of Bioassays to Assess Consequences of Cultivation of Acacia mangium Trees on Nitrogen Bioavailability to Eucalyptus Trees: Two Case-Studies in Contrasting Tropical Soils

Plants (Basel). 2023 Feb 10;12(4):802. doi: 10.3390/plants12040802.

Abstract

We hypothesized that the nitrogen-fixing tree Acacia mangium could improve the growth and nitrogen nutrition of non-fixing tree species such as Eucalyptus. We measured the N-mineralization and respiration rates of soils sampled from plots covered with Acacia, Eucalyptus or native vegetation at two tropical sites (Itatinga in Brazil and Kissoko in the Congo) in the laboratory. We used a bioassay to assess N bioavailability to eucalypt seedlings grown with and without chemical fertilization for at least 6 months. At each site, Eucalyptus seedling growth and N bioavailability followed the same trends as the N-mineralization rates in soil samples. However, despite lower soil N-mineralization rates under Acacia in the Congo than in Brazil, Eucalyptus seedling growth and N bioavailability were much greater in the Congo, indicating that bioassays in pots are more accurate than N-mineralization rates when predicting the growth of eucalypt seedlings. Hence, in the Congo, planting Acacia mangium could be an attractive option to maintain the growth and N bioavailability of the non-fixing species Eucalyptus while decreasing chemical fertilization. Plant bioassays could help determine if the introduction of N2-fixing trees will improve the growth and mineral nutrition of non-fixing tree species in tropical planted forests.

Keywords: N2-fixing tree species; plant N accumulation; soil N-mineralization rate; soil respiration rate.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the French Agency of National Research through the Intens&Fix project (ANR-10-STRA-004-04) awarded to J.-P.B. K.W. was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology and Silpakorn University for her PhD project. The two sites belong to the SOERE F-ORE-T network, which is supported annually by ECOFOR, AllEnvi and the French National Research Infrastructure ANAEE “https://www.anaee-france.fr (accessed on 7 February 2023)”. The work was also supported by the program Investments for the Future (ANR-10-LABX-04-01) through the use of the Ecotrop platform from CeMEB labEx.