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Featured researches published by Taiki Mori.


Science of The Total Environment | 2017

Different responses of asymbiotic nitrogen fixation to nitrogen addition between disturbed and rehabilitated subtropical forests

Mianhai Zheng; Wei Zhang; Yiqi Luo; Taiki Mori; Qinggong Mao; Senhao Wang; Juan Huang; Xiankai Lu; Jiangming Mo

Asymbiotic nitrogen (N) fixation is an important source of new N in ecosystems, and is sensitive to atmospheric N deposition. However, there is limited understanding of asymbiotic N fixation and its response to N deposition in the context of forest rehabilitation. In this study, we measured N fixation rates (acetylene reduction) in different ecosystem compartments (i.e. soil, forest floor, moss Syrrhopodon armatus, and canopy leaves) in a disturbed and a rehabilitated subtropical forest in southern China, under 12years of N treatments: control, low N addition (50kgNha-1yr-1), and medium N addition (100kgNha-1yr-1). The rehabilitated forest had higher nutrient (e.g. N) availability than the disturbed forest. In control plots, N fixation rates in forest floor were higher in the rehabilitated forest than in the disturbed forest, but N fixation rates in other compartments (soil, S. armatus, and canopy leaves) were comparable between the forests. Nitrogen addition significantly suppressed N fixation in soil, forest floor, S. armatus, and canopy leaves in the disturbed forest, but had no significant effect on those compartments in the rehabilitated forest. The main reasons for the negative effects of N addition on N fixation in the disturbed forest were NH4+ inhibition (soil), the P and C limitation (forest floor), and the reduced N dependence on canopy N-fixers (S. armatus and canopy leaves). We conclude that asymbiotic N fixation does not decline with increasing N availability after rehabilitation in the study forests. The inhibitory effects of N addition on asymbiotic N fixation occurred in the disturbed forest but not in the rehabilitated forest, indicating that forest rehabilitation may change the response of ecosystem function (i.e. N fixation) to N deposition, which merits further study in other tropical and subtropical regions.


SpringerPlus | 2016

Contrasting effects of exogenous phosphorus application on N2O emissions from two tropical forest soils with contrasting phosphorus availability

Taiki Mori; Daiki Yokoyama; Kanehiro Kitayama

Abstract An incubation study was conducted to test the effects of phosphorus (P) addition on nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions from the soils taken from two tropical rain forests established on different parent materials [meta-sedimentary (MS) and ultrabasic (UB) rock] on Mt. Kinabalu, Borneo. Earlier studies suggest that the forest on UB soils is more strongly limited by P than that on MS soils is. In MS soils, P addition significantly reduced N2O emissions. Since neither ammonium (NH4+) nor nitrate (NO3−) contents were reduced by P addition, we assumed that the decrease in N2O emissions were not due to the previously-reported mechanism: P addition stimulated microbial nitrogen (N) immobilization and collateral inorganic N consumption, reducing resources for producing N2O. Since P addition enhanced the ratios of microbial biomass to CO2 and N2O emissions (indicators of nitrifying and/or denitrifying respiratory efficiency), it was suggested that the N required for the respiration of nitrifying and/or denitrifying bacteria was reduced, leading to reduced N2O emissions. On the other hand, P addition had no effects on N2O emissions in UB soils. The respiratory efficiency did not change significantly by P addition, possibly because the microbial community in the highly-P-depleted UB soils shifted by P addition, with which the enhancement of respiration efficiency did not co-vary. We concluded that (1) P addition may control N2O emissions through increasing respiratory efficiency, and (2) the effects may be different depending on the differences in P availability.


Soil Science and Plant Nutrition | 2018

Characteristics of phosphorus fractions in the soils derived from sedimentary and serpentinite rocks in lowland tropical rain forests, Borneo

Daiki Yokoyama; Taiki Mori; Rota Wagai; Syuntaro Hiradate; Kanehiro Kitayama

ABSTRACT Soil organic phosphorus (P) is an important P source for biota especially in P-limited forests. Organic P has various chemical formations which differ in bioavailability and these organic P can be degraded by phosphatase enzymes. Here, we report soil P fractions inferred from solution 31P-NMR spectroscopy and soil phosphatase activities of two tropical rain forests on contrasting parent materials; sedimentary and ultramafic igneous (serpentinite) rocks. Compared to the sedimentary soils and previous studies, P fractions of the serpentinite soils have distinctly high proportions of pyrophosphate and scyllo-inositol hexakisphosphate (scyllo-IP6). The accumulation of pyrophosphate and scyllo-IP6 may be related to strong sorptive capacity of iron oxides present in the serpentinite soils, which implies a consequent low P availability in the serpentinite soils. Mean value of soil phosphatase activities was higher in the serpentinite soils than in the sedimentary soils, suggesting that biota in these serpentinite forests depend more on soil organic P as a P source.


Soil Science and Plant Nutrition | 2018

Effects of nitrogen and phosphorus fertilization on the ratio of activities of carbon-acquiring to nitrogen-acquiring enzymes in a primary lowland tropical rainforest in Borneo, Malaysia

Taiki Mori; Nobuo Imai; Daiki Yokoyama; Kanehiro Kitayama

ABSTRACT Previous meta-analyses revealed that the ratio of activities of carbon (C)-acquiring enzyme to nitrogen (N)-acquiring enzymes in tropical forest ecosystems was nearly identical to those in other ecosystems, despite of the N-rich condition in tropical forests. This could be explained by microbes in tropical forest soils, which require a large amount of N to produce N-rich acid phosphatase (AP) for catalyzation of the organic form of phosphorus (P) and compensation for poor P availability in soils. Based on this idea, we hypothesized that experimental P fertilization would reduce the allocation to N-acquiring enzymes compared with that of C-acquiring enzymes, i.e. that it would increase the ratios of activities of β-1,4-glucosidase (BG) to β-1,4-acetylglucosaminidase (NAG) and leucine aminopeptidase (LAP). We tested this hypothesis using an experimental fertilization site with factorial N (100 kg ha−1 yr−1) and P (50 kg ha−1 yr−1) addition in a primary tropical lowland forest in Bornean Malaysia, where our earlier work demonstrated that P fertilization reduced AP activity. Contrary to our hypothesis, the BG:NAG and BG:(NAG + LAP) ratios were not altered by either N or P fertilizations. This result indicated that AP production was not a reason for the maintenance of a relatively high investment in N-acquiring enzyme at our study site. Rather, NAG and LAP production was likely driven by C acquisition, rather than N acquisition, as the target substrates contained C as well as N. This idea was supported by the fact that neither the BG:NAG ratio nor the BG:(NAG + LAP) ratio was elevated by N addition. We propose that the ratios of activities of BG to NAG and LAP do not necessarily indicate the ratio of C:N acquisition, at least in our N-rich tropical forest ecosystem.


Geoderma | 2017

Effects of long-term nitrogen and phosphorus additions on soil acidification in an N-rich tropical forest

Qinggong Mao; Xiankai Lu; Kaijun Zhou; Hao Chen; Xiaomin Zhu; Taiki Mori; Jiangming Mo


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2018

Responses of soil microbial community to continuous experimental nitrogen additions for 13 years in a nitrogen-rich tropical forest

Cong Wang; Xiankai Lu; Taiki Mori; Qinggong Mao; Kaijun Zhou; Guoyi Zhou; Yanxia Nie; Jiangming Mo


Agriculture and Natural Resources | 2016

Contrastive effects of inorganic phosphorus addition on soil microbial respiration and microbial biomass in tropical monoculture tree plantation soils in Thailand

Taiki Mori; Chongrak Wachrinrat; Duriya Staporn; Ponthep Meunpong; Warawich Suebsai; Kazuki Matsubara; Khitja Boonsri; Warisa Lumban; Manassawee Kuawong; Thanida Phukdee; Juruwan Srifai; Kannika Boonman


Tropics | 2016

Seasonal changes in soil respiration and microbial biomass in five tropical tree plantations in Thailand

Taiki Mori; Chongrak Wachrinrat; Duriya Staporn; Ponthep Meunpong; Warawich Suebsai; Khitja Boonsri; Kanehiro Kitayama


Functional Ecology | 2018

Reconsidering the phosphorus limitation of soil microbial activity in tropical forests

Taiki Mori; Xiankai Lu; Ryota Aoyagi; Jiangming Mo


Tropics | 2018

A preliminary report: does reduced impact logging (RIL) mitigate non-CO 2 greenhouse gas emissions from natural production forests?

Taiki Mori; Nobuo Imai; Kanehiro Kitayama

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Jiangming Mo

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiankai Lu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Kaijun Zhou

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Qinggong Mao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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