Short-term responses of ecosystem carbon fluxes to experimental soil warming at the Swiss alpine treeline

被引:35
作者
Hagedorn, Frank [1 ]
Martin, Melissa [2 ]
Rixen, Christian [2 ]
Rusch, Silvan [1 ]
Bebi, Peter [2 ]
Zuercher, Alois [1 ]
Siegwolf, Rolf T. W. [3 ]
Wipf, Sonja [1 ]
Escape, Christophe [4 ]
Roy, Jacques [4 ]
Haettenschwiler, Stephan [4 ]
机构
[1] Swiss Fed Inst Forest Snow & Landscape Res WSL, CH-8093 Birmensdorf, Switzerland
[2] WSL Inst Snow & Avalanche Res SLF, CH-7260 Davos, Switzerland
[3] Paul Scherrer Inst, CH-5232 Villigen, Switzerland
[4] CEFE CNRS, F-34293 Montpellier, France
基金
瑞士国家科学基金会;
关键词
Carbon; Climate change; Dissolved organic carbon; Soil organic matter; Soil respiration; Stable isotopes; Temperature; Treeline; DISSOLVED ORGANIC-CARBON; CLIMATE-CHANGE; NITROGEN MINERALIZATION; TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCE; CO2; ENRICHMENT; TUNDRA ECOTONE; GROWTH; MATTER; FOREST; DECOMPOSITION;
D O I
10.1007/s10533-009-9297-9
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Climatic warming will probably have particularly large impacts on carbon fluxes in high altitude and latitude ecosystems due to their great stocks of labile soil C and high temperature sensitivity. At the alpine treeline, we experimentally warmed undisturbed soils by 4 K for one growing season with heating cables at the soil surface and measured the response of net C uptake by plants, of soil respiration, and of leaching of dissolved organic carbon (DOC). Soil warming increased soil CO2 effluxes instantaneously and throughout the whole vegetation period (+45%; +120 g C m y(-1)). In contrast, DOC leaching showed a negligible response of a 5% increase (NS). Annual C uptake of new shoots was not significantly affected by elevated soil temperatures, with a 17, 12, and 14% increase for larch, pine, and dwarf shrubs, respectively, resulting in an overall increase in net C uptake by plants of 20-40 g C m(-2)y(-1). The Q (10) of 3.0 measured for soil respiration did not change compared to a 3-year period before the warming treatment started, suggesting little impact of warming-induced lower soil moisture (-15% relative decrease) or increased soil C losses. The fraction of recent plant-derived C in soil respired CO2 from warmed soils was smaller than that from control soils (25 vs. 40% of total C respired), which implies that the warming-induced increase in soil CO2 efflux resulted mainly from mineralization of older SOM rather than from stimulated root respiration. In summary, one season of 4 K soil warming, representative of hot years, led to C losses from the studied alpine treeline ecosystem by increasing SOM decomposition more than C gains through plant growth.
引用
收藏
页码:7 / 19
页数:13
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