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Controls of Bedrock Geochemistry on Soil and Plant Nutrients in Southeastern Utah

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Abstract

The cold deserts of the Colorado Plateau contain numerous geologically and geochemically distinct sedimentary bedrock types. In the area near Canyonlands National Park in Southeastern Utah, geochemical variation in geologic substrates is related to the depositional environment with higher concentrations of Fe, Al, P, K, and Mg in sediments deposited in alluvial or marine environments and lower concentrations in bedrock derived from eolian sand dunes. Availability of soil nutrients to vegetation is also controlled by the formation of secondary minerals, particularly for P and Ca availability, which, in some geologic settings, appears closely related to variation of CaCO3 and Ca-phosphates in soils. However, the results of this study also indicate that P content is related to bedrock and soil Fe and Al content suggesting that the deposition history of the bedrock and the presence of P-bearing Fe and Al minerals, is important to contemporary P cycling in this region. The relation between bedrock type and exchangeable Mg and K is less clear-cut, despite large variation in bedrock concentrations of these elements. We examined soil nutrient concentrations and foliar nutrient concentration of grasses, shrubs, conifers, and forbs in four geochemically distinct field sites. All four of the functional plant groups had similar proportional responses to variation in soil nutrient availability despite large absolute differences in foliar nutrient concentrations and stoichiometry across species. Foliar P concentration (normalized to N) in particular showed relatively small variation across different geochemical settings despite large variation in soil P availability in these study sites. The limited foliar variation in bedrock-derived nutrients suggests that the dominant plant species in this dryland setting have a remarkably strong capacity to maintain foliar chemistry ratios despite large underlying differences in soil nutrient availability.

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Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the Earth Surface Dynamics Program of the U.S. Geological Survey and an Andrew Mellon Foundation grant to J. C. Neff. Harland Goldstein, Nathan Wojcik, and Silvina Moscato assisted in the collection and analysis of samples. John Drexler at the Laboratory for Environmental Geochemistry at the University of Colorado provided the Electron Microprobe analysis. William Bowman, Mark Miller, Jayshree Ratnam, and Peter Vitousek and two anonymous referees provided helpful comments on earlier versions of this manuscript.

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Correspondence to J. C. Neff.

Appendix

Appendix

Appendix A. Plant Carbon, Nitrogen, and Rock Derived Nutrient Content across the Four Bedrock Geological Settings Studied

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Neff, J.C., Reynolds, R., Sanford, R.L. et al. Controls of Bedrock Geochemistry on Soil and Plant Nutrients in Southeastern Utah. Ecosystems 9, 879–893 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10021-005-0092-8

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