TY - JOUR
T1 - Non-growing-season soil respiration is controlled by freezing and thawing processes in the summer monsoon-dominated Tibetan alpine grassland
AU - Wang, Yonghui
AU - Liu, Huiying
AU - Chung, Haegeun
AU - Yu, Lingfei
AU - Mi, Zhaorong
AU - Geng, Yan
AU - Jing, Xin
AU - Wang, Shiping
AU - Zeng, Hui
AU - Cao, Guangmin
AU - Zhao, Xinquan
AU - He, Jin Sheng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2014. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2014/10/1
Y1 - 2014/10/1
N2 - The Tibetan alpine grasslands, sharing many features with arctic tundra ecosystems, have a unique non-growing-season climate that is usually dry and without persistent snow cover. Pronounced winter warming recently observed in this ecosystem may significantly alter the non-growing-season carbon cycle processes such as soil respiration (Rs), but detailed measurements to assess the patterns, drivers of, and potential feedbacks on Rs have not been made yet. We conducted a 4 year study on Rs using a unique Rs measuring system, composed of an automated soil CO2 flux sampling system and a custom-made container, to facilitate measurements in this extreme environment. We found that in the nongrowing season, (1) cumulative Rs was 82-89 g C m-2, accounting for 11.8-13.2% of the annual total Rs; (2) surface soil freezing controlled the diurnal pattern of Rs and bulk soil freezing induced lower reference respiration rate (R0) and temperature sensitivity (Q10) than those in the growing season (0.40-0.53 versus 0.84-1.32 μmol CO2 m-2 s-1 for R0 and 2.5-2.9 versus 2.9-5.6 for Q10); and (3) the intraannual variation in cumulative Rs was controlled by accumulated surface soil temperature. We found that in the summer monsoon-dominated Tibetan alpine grassland, surface soil freezing, bulk soil freezing, and accumulated surface soil temperature are the day-, season-, and year-scale drivers of the non-growing-season Rs, respectively. Our results suggest that warmer winters can trigger carbon loss from this ecosystem because of higher Q10 of thawed than frozen soils. Key Points Four year continuous hourly monitoring of soil CO2 flux (Rs) using automated systemNon-growing-season cumulative Rs accounted for 11.8-13.2%
AB - The Tibetan alpine grasslands, sharing many features with arctic tundra ecosystems, have a unique non-growing-season climate that is usually dry and without persistent snow cover. Pronounced winter warming recently observed in this ecosystem may significantly alter the non-growing-season carbon cycle processes such as soil respiration (Rs), but detailed measurements to assess the patterns, drivers of, and potential feedbacks on Rs have not been made yet. We conducted a 4 year study on Rs using a unique Rs measuring system, composed of an automated soil CO2 flux sampling system and a custom-made container, to facilitate measurements in this extreme environment. We found that in the nongrowing season, (1) cumulative Rs was 82-89 g C m-2, accounting for 11.8-13.2% of the annual total Rs; (2) surface soil freezing controlled the diurnal pattern of Rs and bulk soil freezing induced lower reference respiration rate (R0) and temperature sensitivity (Q10) than those in the growing season (0.40-0.53 versus 0.84-1.32 μmol CO2 m-2 s-1 for R0 and 2.5-2.9 versus 2.9-5.6 for Q10); and (3) the intraannual variation in cumulative Rs was controlled by accumulated surface soil temperature. We found that in the summer monsoon-dominated Tibetan alpine grassland, surface soil freezing, bulk soil freezing, and accumulated surface soil temperature are the day-, season-, and year-scale drivers of the non-growing-season Rs, respectively. Our results suggest that warmer winters can trigger carbon loss from this ecosystem because of higher Q10 of thawed than frozen soils. Key Points Four year continuous hourly monitoring of soil CO2 flux (Rs) using automated systemNon-growing-season cumulative Rs accounted for 11.8-13.2%
KW - Tibetan Plateau
KW - alpine ecosystem
KW - carbon cycling
KW - soil freezing
KW - winter soil respiration
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84910120850
U2 - 10.1002/2013GB004760
DO - 10.1002/2013GB004760
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:84910120850
SN - 0886-6236
VL - 28
SP - 1081
EP - 1095
JO - Global Biogeochemical Cycles
JF - Global Biogeochemical Cycles
IS - 10
ER -