Response of soil respiration to simulated N deposition in a disturbed and a rehabilitated tropical forest in southern China

被引:28
作者
Jiangming Mo
Wei Zhang
Weixing Zhu
Yunting Fang
Dejun Li
Ping Zhao
机构
[1] The Chinese Academy of Sciences,South China Botanical Garden
[2] State University of New York,Department of Biological Sciences
来源
Plant and Soil | 2007年 / 296卷
关键词
Anthropogenic disturbances; Soil respiration; N deposition; C sequestration; China; Tropics;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Responses of soil respiration (CO2 emission) to simulated N deposition were studied in a disturbed (reforested forest with previous understory and litter harvesting) and a rehabilitated (reforested forest with no understory and litter harvesting) tropical forest in southern China from October 2005 to September 2006. The objectives of the study were to test the following hypotheses: (1) soil respiration is higher in rehabilitated forest than in disturbed forest; (2) soil respiration in both rehabilitated and disturbed tropical forests is stimulated by N additions; and (3) soil respiration is more sensitive to N addition in disturbed forest than in rehabilitated forest due to relatively low soil nutrient status in the former, resulting from different previous human disturbance. Static chamber and gas chromatography techniques were employed to quantify the soil respiration, following different N treatments (Control, no N addition; Low-N, 5 g N m−2 year−1; Medium-N, 10 g N m−2 year−1), which had been applied continuously for 26 months before the respiration measurement. Results showed that soil respiration exhibited a strong seasonal pattern, with the highest rates observed in the hot and wet growing season (April–September) and the lowest rates in winter (December–February) in both rehabilitated and disturbed forests. Soil respiration rates exhibited significant positive exponential relationship with soil temperature and significant positive linear relationship with soil moisture. Soil respiration was also significantly higher in the rehabilitated forest than in the disturbed forest. Annual mean soil respiration rate in the rehabilitated forest was 20% lower in low-N plots (71 ± 4 mg CO2-C m−2 h−1) and 10% lower in medium-N plots (80 ± 4 mg CO2-C m−2 h−1) than in the control plots (89 ± 5 mg CO2-C m−2 h−1), and the differences between the control and low-N or medium-N treatments were statistically significant. In disturbed forest, annual mean soil respiration rate was 5% lower in low-N plots (63 ± 3 mg CO2-C m−2 h−1) and 8% lower in medium-N plots (61 ± 3 mg CO2-C m−2 h−1) than in the control plots (66 ± 4 mg CO2-C m−2 h−1), but the differences among treatments were not significant. The depressed effects of experimental N deposition occurred mostly in the hot and wet growing season. Our results suggest that response of soil respiration to elevated N deposition in the reforested tropical forests may vary depending on the status of human disturbance.
引用
收藏
页码:125 / 135
页数:10
相关论文
共 152 条
[1]  
Aber JD(1989)Nitrogen saturation in northern forest ecosystems BioScience 39 378-386
[2]  
Nadelhoffer KJ(2003)Effect of warming on the temperature dependence of soil respiration rate in arctic, temperate and tropical soils Appl Soil Ecol 22 205-210
[3]  
Steudler P(1998)Vegetation and soil biota response to experimentally-changed nitrogen inputs in coniferous forest ecosystems of the NITREX project For Ecol Manage 101 65-79
[4]  
Melillo JM(2000)Soil fluxes of carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide, and methane at a productive temperate deciduous forest J Environ Qual 29 268-276
[5]  
Bekku YS(2004)Chronic nitrogen additions reduce total soil respiration and microbial respiration in temperate forest soils at the Harvard Forest For Ecol Manage 196 43-56
[6]  
Nakatsubo T(1995)Structure and organic matter dynamics of a human-impacted pine forest in a MAB reserve of subtropical China Biotropica 27 276-289
[7]  
Kume A(2004)Simulated chronic NO3- deposition reduces soil respiration in northern hardwood forests Global Change Biol 10 1080-1091
[8]  
Adachi M(2006)Nutrient additions to a tropical rain forest drive substantial soil carbon dioxide losses to the atmosphere PNAS 103 10316-10321
[9]  
Koizumi H(2004)Effects of an experimental drought on soil emissions of carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and nitric oxide in a moist tropical forest Global Biogeochem Cycle 10 718-730
[10]  
Boxman AW(1996)Seasonal variations of CO Acta Geogr Sin 51 120-128