Several lines of evidence suggest that nitrogen in most tropical forests is relatively more available than N in most temperate forests, and even that it may function as an excess nutrient in many tropical forests. If this is correct, tropical forests should have more open N cycles than temperate forests, with both inputs and outputs of N large relative to N cycling within systems. Consequent differences in both the magnitude and the pathways of N loss imply that tropical forests should in general be more N-15 enriched than are most temperate forests. In order to test this hypothesis, we compared the nitrogen stable isotopic composition of tree leaves and soils from a variety of tropical and temperate forests. Foliar delta(15)N values from tropical forests averaged 6.5 parts per thousand higher than from temperate forests. Within the tropics, ecosystems with relatively low N availability (montane forests, forests on sandy soils) were significantly more depleted in N-15 than other tropical forests. The average delta(15)N values for tropical forest soils, either for surface or for depth samples, were almost 8 parts per thousand higher than temperate forest soils. These results provide another line of evidence that N is relatively abundant in many tropical forest ecosystems.