soil heterotrophic respiration
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Author(s):  
Caius Ribeiro-Kumara ◽  
Cristina Santín ◽  
Stefan H. Doerr ◽  
Jukka Pumpanen ◽  
Greg Baxter ◽  
...  

Fires are an important perturbation for the carbon (C) dynamics of boreal forests, especially when they are stand-replacing. In North American boreal forests, crown fires are predominant and, therefore, the most studied. However, surface fires can also lead to major tree mortality with substantial implications for the C balance. Here, we assess the short- (hours – days) to medium-term (1 – 3 years) effects of the different fire types (surface vs. crown) on the postfire soil C effluxes in jack pine and black spruce forest stands in the Northwest Territories, Canada. We found that while trees were instantly killed by the four crown fires studied, trees also died within one year after two of three surface fires studied. Associated with this tree mortality, soil autotrophic respiration decreased after both fire types, although at different timings. The soil heterotrophic respiration was either lower or unchanged when measured 1 – 3 years after either fire type, but was increased when measured immediately after a surface fire, possibly due to the interaction between ash generation and wetting performed to suppress the fire. Our results suggest that both fire types can thus substantially alter C fluxes in the short- to medium-term, both through changes in vegetation and the soil environment.


2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (52) ◽  
pp. e2115283118
Author(s):  
Heng Huang ◽  
Salvatore Calabrese ◽  
Ignacio Rodriguez-Iturbe

Soil heterotrophic respiration (Rh) represents an important component of the terrestrial carbon cycle that affects whether ecosystems function as carbon sources or sinks. Due to the complex interactions between biological and physical factors controlling microbial growth, Rh is uncertain and difficult to predict, limiting our ability to anticipate future climate trajectories. Here we analyze the global FLUXNET 2015 database aided by a probabilistic model of microbial growth to examine the ecosystem-scale dynamics of Rh and identify primary predictors of its variability. We find that the temporal variability in Rh is consistently distributed according to a Gamma distribution, with shape and scale parameters controlled only by rainfall characteristics and vegetation productivity. This distribution originates from the propagation of fast hydrologic fluctuations on the slower biological dynamics of microbial growth and is independent of biome, soil type, and microbial physiology. This finding allows us to readily provide accurate estimates of the mean Rh and its variance, as confirmed by a comparison with an independent global dataset. Our results suggest that future changes in rainfall regime and net primary productivity will significantly alter the dynamics of Rh and the global carbon budget. In regions that are becoming wetter, Rh may increase faster than net primary productivity, thereby reducing the carbon storage capacity of terrestrial ecosystems.


Forests ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 1159
Author(s):  
Jun-Fu Zhao ◽  
Zhi-Yong Liao ◽  
Lian-Yan Yang ◽  
Jian-Kang Shi ◽  
Zheng-Hong Tan

Background: Although numerous studies have been carried out in recent decades, soil respiration remains one of the less understood elements in global carbon budget research. Tropical forests store a considerable amount of carbon, and a well-established knowledge of the patterns, components, and controls of soil respiration in these forests will be crucial in global change research. Methods: Soil respiration was separated into two components using the trenching method. Each component was measured at multiple temporal scales and in different microhabitats. A commercial soil efflux system (Li8100/8150) was used to accomplish soil respiration monitoring. Four commonly used models were compared that described the temperature dependence of soil heterotrophic respiration using nonlinear statistics. Results and Conclusions: Trenching has a limited effect on soil temperature but considerably affects soil water content due to the exclusion of water loss via tree transpiration. Soil respiration decreased gradually from 8 to 4 μmol·m−2·s−1 6 days after trenching. Soil autotrophic (Ra) and heterotrophic respiration (Rh) have contrasting diel patterns and different responses to temperature. Rh was negatively correlated with temperature but positively correlated with relative humidity. Both Ra and Rh varied dramatically among microhabitats. The Q10 value of Rh derived using the Q10 model was 2.54. The Kirschbaum–O’Connell model, which implied a strong decrease of Q10 with temperature, worked best in describing temperature dependence of Rh. Heterotrophic respiration accounted for nearly half of the total soil efflux. We found an unexpected diurnal pattern in soil heterotrophic respiration which might be related to diurnal moisture dynamics. Temperature, but not soil moisture, was the major controller of seasonal variation of soil respiration in both autotrophic and heterotrophic components. From a statistical perspective, the best model to describe the temperature sensitivity of soil respiration was the Kirschbaum–O’Connell model. Soil respiration varied strongly among the microhabitats and played a crucial role in stand-level ecosystem carbon balance assessment.


SOIL ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 547-561
Author(s):  
Jörg Schnecker ◽  
D. Boone Meeden ◽  
Francisco Calderon ◽  
Michel Cavigelli ◽  
R. Michael Lehman ◽  
...  

Abstract. Increasing climatic pressures such as drought and flooding challenge agricultural systems and their management globally. How agricultural soils respond to soil water extremes will influence biogeochemical cycles of carbon and nitrogen in these systems. We investigated the response of soils from long-term agricultural field sites under varying crop rotational complexity to either drought or flooding stress. Focusing on these contrasting stressors separately, we investigated soil heterotrophic respiration during single and repeated stress cycles in soils from four different sites along a precipitation gradient (Colorado, MAP 421 mm; South Dakota, MAP 580 mm; Michigan, MAP 893 mm; Maryland, MAP 1192 mm); each site had two crop rotational complexity treatments. At the driest (Colorado) and wettest (Maryland) of these sites, we also analyzed microbial biomass, six potential enzyme activities, and N2O production during and after individual and repeated stress cycles. In general, we found site specific responses to soil water extremes, irrespective of crop rotational complexity and precipitation history. Drought usually caused more severe changes in respiration rates and potential enzyme activities than flooding. All soils returned to control levels for most measured parameters as soon as soils returned to control water levels following drought or flood stress, suggesting that the investigated soils were highly resilient to the applied stresses. The lack of sustained responses following the removal of the stressors may be because they are well in the range of natural in situ soil water fluctuations at the investigated sites. Without the inclusion of plants in our experiment, we found that irrespective of crop rotation complexity, soil and microbial properties in the investigated agricultural soils were more resistant to flooding but highly resilient to drought and flooding during single or repeated stress pulses.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinshi Jian ◽  
Ben Bond‐Lamberty ◽  
Dalei Hao ◽  
Benjamin N. Sulman ◽  
Kaizad F. Patel ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jörg Schnecker ◽  
D. Boone Meeden ◽  
Francisco Calderon ◽  
Michel Cavigelli ◽  
R. Michael Lehman ◽  
...  

Abstract. Increasing climatic pressures such as drought and flooding challenge agricultural systems and their management globally. How agricultural soils respond to soil water extremes will influence biogeochemical cycles of carbon and nitrogen in these systems. We investigated the response of soils from long term agricultural field sites under varying crop rotational complexity to either drought or flooding stress. Focusing on these contrasting stressors separately, we investigated soil heterotrophic respiration during single and repeated stress cycles in soils from four different sites along a precipitation gradient (Colorado, MAP 421 mm; South Dakota, MAP 580 mm; Michigan, MAP 893 mm; Maryland, MAP 1192 mm); each site had two crop rotational complexity treatments. At the driest (Colorado) and wettest of these sites (Maryland) we also analyzed microbial biomass, six potential enzyme activities and N2O production, during and after individual and repeated stress cycles. In general, we found site specific responses to soil water extremes, irrespective of crop rotational complexity and precipitation history. Drought usually caused more severe changes in respiration rates and potential enzyme activities than flooding. All soils returned to control levels for most measured parameters as soon as soils returned to control water levels following drought or flood stress, suggesting that the investigated soils were highly resilient to the applied stresses. The lack of sustained responses following the removal of the stressors may be because they are well in the range of natural in situ soil water fluctuations at the investigated sites. Without inclusion of plants in our experiment, we found that irrespective of crop rotation complexity, soil and microbial properties in the investigated agricultural soils were more resistant to flooding but highly resilient to drought and flooding, during single or repeated stress pulses.


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