Forest recovery after deforestation is fueled by mineral weathering at the expense of ecosystem buffering capacity.
The pace and trajectory of ecosystem development are governed by the availability and cycling of limiting nutrients, and anthropogenic disturbances such as acid rain and deforestation alter these trajectories by removing substantial quantities of nutrients via titration or harvest. Here, we use six decades of continuous chemical and hydrologic data from three adjacent headwater catchments in the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest, New Hampshire-one deforested (W5), one CaSiO3-enriched (W1), and one reference (W6)-to quantify long-term nutrient and mineral fluxes. Acid deposition since 1900 drove pronounced depletion and export of base cations, particularly calcium, across all watersheds. Experimental deforestation of W5 intensified loss of biomass and nutrient cations and triggered sustained increases in streamwater pH, Ca2+, and SiO2 exports over nearly four decades, greatly exceeding the effects of direct CaSiO3 enrichment in both duration and magnitude. We detect no long-term changes in water yield or water flow paths in the experimental watersheds, and we attribute this multidecadal increase in weathering rates following deforestation to biological responses to severe nutrient limitation. Our evidence suggests that in the regrowing forest, plants are investing photosynthate into belowground processes that amplify mineral weathering to access phosphorus and micronutrients, consequently elevating the export of less limiting elements present in silicate parent material. Throughout decades of forest regrowth, enhanced biotic weathering has continued to deplete the acid buffering capacity of the terrestrial ecosystem while the export of weathering products has elevated the pH of the receiving stream.
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Related Subject Headings
- Trees
- New Hampshire
- Minerals
- Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
- Forests
- Ecosystem
- Conservation of Natural Resources
- Biomass
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Trees
- New Hampshire
- Minerals
- Hydrogen-Ion Concentration
- Forests
- Ecosystem
- Conservation of Natural Resources
- Biomass