Hans Wullaert
University of Mainz
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hans Wullaert.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Jürgen Homeier; Dietrich Hertel; Nixon L. Cumbicus; Mark Maraun; Guntars O. Martinson; L. Nohemy Poma; Matthias C. Rillig; Dorothee Sandmann; Stefan Scheu; Edzo Veldkamp; Wolfgang Wilcke; Hans Wullaert; Christoph Leuschner
Tropical regions are facing increasing atmospheric inputs of nutrients, which will have unknown consequences for the structure and functioning of these systems. Here, we show that Neotropical montane rainforests respond rapidly to moderate additions of N (50 kg ha−1 yr−1) and P (10 kg ha−1 yr−1). Monitoring of nutrient fluxes demonstrated that the majority of added nutrients remained in the system, in either soil or vegetation. N and P additions led to not only an increase in foliar N and P concentrations, but also altered soil microbial biomass, standing fine root biomass, stem growth, and litterfall. The different effects suggest that trees are primarily limited by P, whereas some processes—notably aboveground productivity—are limited by both N and P. Highly variable and partly contrasting responses of different tree species suggest marked changes in species composition and diversity of these forests by nutrient inputs in the long term. The unexpectedly fast response of the ecosystem to moderate nutrient additions suggests high vulnerability of tropical montane forests to the expected increase in nutrient inputs.
Archive | 2013
Ute Hamer; Karin Potthast; Wolfgang Wilcke; Hans Wullaert; Carlos Valarezo; Dorothee Sandmann; Mark Maraun; Stefan Scheu; Jürgen Homeier
Nutrient inputs into ecosystems of the tropical mountain rainforest region are projected to further increase in the next decades. To investigate whether important ecosystem services such as nutrient cycling and matter turnover in native forests and pasture ecosystems show different patterns of response, two nutrient addition experiments have been established: NUMEX in the forest and FERPAST at the pasture. Both ecosystems already responded 1.5 years after the start of nutrient application (N, P, NP, Ca). Interestingly, most nutrients remained in the respective systems. While the pasture grass was co-limited by N and P, most tree species responded to P addition. Soil microbial biomass in the forest litter layer increased after NP fertilization pointing to nutrient co-limitation. In pasture soils, microorganisms were neither limited by N nor P. The results support the hypothesis that multiple and temporally variable nutrient limitations can coexist in tropical ecosystems.
Global Change Biology | 2008
Birgit Koehler; Marife D. Corre; Edzo Veldkamp; Hans Wullaert; S. Joseph Wright
Forest Ecology and Management | 2010
Hans Wullaert; Jens Homeier; Carlos Valarezo; Wolfgang Wilcke
Journal of Hydrology | 2009
Hans Wullaert; T. Pohlert; Jens Boy; Carlos Valarezo; Wolfgang Wilcke
Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science | 2013
Hans Wullaert; Moritz Bigalke; Jürgen Homeier; Nixon L. Cumbicus; Carlos Valarezo; Wolfgang Wilcke
iLEAPS Newsletter | 2010
Birgit Koehler; Marife D. Corre; Edzo Veldkamp; Hans Wullaert; S. Joseph Wright
Journal of Hydrology | 2010
Hans Wullaert; T. Pohlert; Jens Boy; Carlos Valarezo; Wolfgang Wilcke
IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science | 2009
Hans Wullaert; Guntars O. Martinson; Jürgen Homeier; Edzo Veldkamp; Wolfgang Wilcke
Archive | 2008
Hans Wullaert; Jorge E. Pena; Enrique Gonzalez; Carlos Valarezo; Wolfgang Wilcke