Impacts of an anomalously warm year on soil CO2 efflux in experimentally manipulated tallgrass prairie ecosystems

被引:40
|
作者
Verburg, PSJ
Larsen, J
Johnson, DW
Schorran, DE
Arnone, JA
机构
[1] Desert Res Inst, Div Earth & Ecosyst Sci, Reno, NV 89512 USA
[2] Univ Nevada, Dept Environm & Resource Sci, Reno, NV 89557 USA
关键词
interannual climate variability; mesocosms; plant canopy development; soil CO2 efflux; soil respiration; tallgrass prairie;
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2486.2005.001032.x
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
Modeling analyses suggest that an increase in growth rate of atmospheric CO2 concentrations during an anomalously warm year may be caused by a decrease in net ecosystem production (NEP) in response to increased heterotrophic respiration (R-h). To test this hypothesis, 12 intact soil monoliths were excavated from a tallgrass prairie site near Purcell, Oklahoma, USA and divided among four large dynamic flux chambers (Ecologically Controlled Enclosed Lysimeter Laboratories (EcoCELLs)). During the first year, all four EcoCELLs were subjected to Oklahoma air temperatures. During the second year, air temperature in two EcoCELLs was increased by 4 degrees C throughout the year to simulate anomalously warm conditions. This paper reports on the effect of warming on soil CO2 efflux, representing the sum of autotrophic respiration (R-a) and R-h. During the pretreatment year, weekly average soil CO2 efflux was similar in all EcoCELLs. During the late spring, summer and early fall of the treatment year, however, soil CO2 efflux was significantly lower in the warmed EcoCELLs. In general, soil CO2 efflux was correlated with soil temperature and to a lesser extent with moisture. A combined temperature and moisture regression explained 64% of the observed variation in soil CO2 efflux. Soil CO2 efflux correlated well with a net primary production (NPP) weighted greenness index derived from digital photographs. Although separate relationships for control and warmed EcoCELLs showed better correlations, one single relationship explained close to 70% of the variation in soil CO2 efflux across treatments and years. A strong correlation between soil CO2 efflux and canopy development and the lack of initial response to warming indicate that soil CO2 efflux is dominated by R-a. This study showed that a decrease in soil CO2 efflux in response to a warm year was most likely dominated by a decrease in R-a instead of an increase in R-h.
引用
收藏
页码:1720 / 1732
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Impacts of an anomalously warm year on soil nitrogen availability in experimentally manipulated intact tallgrass prairie ecosystems
    Verburg, Paul S. J.
    Johnson, Dale W.
    Schorran, David E.
    Wallace, Linda L.
    Luo, Y.
    Arnone, John A., III
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2009, 15 (04) : 888 - 900
  • [2] Response of soil CO2 efflux to water manipulation in a tallgrass prairie ecosystem
    Xiaozhong Liu
    Shiqiang Wan
    Bo Su
    Dafeng Hui
    Yiqi Luo
    Plant and Soil, 2002, 240 : 213 - 223
  • [3] Response of soil CO2 efflux to water manipulation in a tallgrass prairie ecosystem
    Liu, XZ
    Wan, SQ
    Su, B
    Hui, DF
    Luo, YQ
    PLANT AND SOIL, 2002, 240 (02) : 213 - 223
  • [4] Soil CO2 flux in a tallgrass prairie
    Mielnick, PC
    Dugas, WA
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2000, 32 (02): : 221 - 228
  • [5] SOIL MICROBIAL RESPONSE IN TALLGRASS PRAIRIE TO ELEVATED CO2
    RICE, CW
    GARCIA, FO
    HAMPTON, CO
    OWENSBY, CE
    PLANT AND SOIL, 1994, 165 (01) : 67 - 74
  • [6] Partitioning of soil CO2 efflux in un-manipulated and experimentally flooded plots of a temperate fen
    Wunderlich, S.
    Borken, W.
    BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2012, 9 (08) : 3477 - 3489
  • [7] POTENTIAL IMPACTS OF ELEVATED CO2 AND ABOVEGROUND AND BELOWGROUND LITTER QUALITY OF A TALLGRASS PRAIRIE
    OWENSBY, CE
    WATER AIR AND SOIL POLLUTION, 1993, 70 (1-4): : 413 - 424
  • [8] Soil CO2 efflux responses to soil loss on two rangeland ecosystems
    Thorne, MS
    Trlica, MJ
    Leininger, WC
    Child, RD
    Klein, DA
    RANGELAND ECOLOGY & MANAGEMENT, 2005, 58 (01) : 27 - 34
  • [9] Testing a model of CO2, water and energy exchange in Great Plains tallgrass prairie and wheat ecosystems
    Hanan, NP
    Berry, JA
    Verma, SB
    Walter-Shea, EA
    Suyker, AE
    Burba, GG
    Denning, AS
    AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 2005, 131 (3-4) : 162 - 179
  • [10] Responses of net ecosystem CO2 exchange to nitrogen fertilization in experimentally manipulated grassland ecosystems
    Cheng, Xiaoli
    Luo, Yiqi
    Su, Bo
    Verburg, Paul S. J.
    Hui, Dafeng
    Obrist, Daniel
    Arnone, John A., III
    Johnson, Dale W.
    Evans, R. David
    AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 2009, 149 (11) : 1956 - 1963