Literature DB >> 12598560

A comparison of manual and automated systems for soil CO2 flux measurements: trade-offs between spatial and temporal resolution.

Kathleen E Savage1, Eric A Davidson.   

Abstract

Soil respiration is affected by distributions of roots and soil carbon substrates and by temperature and soil water content, all of which vary spatially and temporally. The objective of this paper was to compare a manual system for measuring soil respiration in a temperate forest, which had a greater spatial distribution of measurements (n=12), but poorer temporal resolution (once per week), with an automated system which had poorer spatial distribution (n=3) but superior temporal frequency of measurements (hourly). Soil respiration was measured between 18 June and 21 August, 2002, at the Harvard Forest in central Massachusetts, USA. The fluxes measured within 1 h of each other by these systems were not significantly different. However, extrapolations of the mid-morning manual measurements to daily flux values were consistently lower (averaging 13% lower) than the daily estimates obtained from summing the 24 hourly measurements of the automated system. On the other hand, seasonal flux estimates obtained by interpolating between weekly manual sampling dates or by summing the hourly automated measurements were nearly identical. Underestimates by interpolated weekly manual measurements during some periods were cancelled by overestimates during other periods. Hence, a weekly sampling schedule may be sufficient to capture the most important variation of seasonal efflux of CO(2) from the soil. The larger number of chambers that could be measured with the manual system (larger n) resulted in a smaller 95% confidence interval for characterizing spatial variability within the study area on most dates. However, the greater sampling frequency of the automated system revealed rapid responses of soil respiration to wetting events, which permitted better empirical modelling of the effects of soil temperature and moisture on soil respiration than could have been achieved with the manual sampling system. Most of the positive residuals of a function that predicts soil respiration based on temperature were from fluxes measured within 12 h of a rain event, and the residuals were positively correlated with water content of the O horizon. The automated system also demonstrated that Q(10) values calculated for diel variation in soil temperature over a few days were not significantly different than Q(10) values for the entire 3 month summer sampling period. In summary, a manual system of numerous, spatially well-distributed flux chambers measured on a weekly basis may be adequate for measuring seasonal fluxes and may maximize confidence in the characterization of spatial variance. The high temporal frequency of measurements afforded by automation greatly improves the ability to measure and model the effects of rapidly varying water content and temperature. When the two approaches can be combined, the temporal representativeness of the manual measurements can be tested with the automated measurements and the spatial representativeness of the automated measurements can be tested by the manual measurements.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12598560     DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erg121

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Bot        ISSN: 0022-0957            Impact factor:   6.992


  5 in total

1.  Soil Respiration in European Grasslands in Relation to Climate and Assimilate Supply.

Authors:  Michael Bahn; Mirco Rodeghiero; Margaret Anderson-Dunn; Sabina Dore; Cristina Gimeno; Matthias Drösler; Michael Williams; Christof Ammann; Frank Berninger; Chris Flechard; Stephanie Jones; Manuela Balzarolo; Suresh Kumar; Christian Newesely; Tibor Priwitzer; Antonio Raschi; Rolf Siegwolf; Sanna Susiluoto; John Tenhunen; Georg Wohlfahrt; Alexander Cernusca
Journal:  Ecosystems       Date:  2008-12       Impact factor: 4.217

2.  Soil respiration at mean annual temperature predicts annual total across vegetation types and biomes.

Authors:  M Bahn; M Reichstein; E A Davidson; J Grünzweig; M Jung; M S Carbone; D Epron; L Misson; Y Nouvellon; O Roupsard; K Savage; S E Trumbore; C Gimeno; J Curiel Yuste; J Tang; R Vargas; I A Janssens
Journal:  Biogeosciences       Date:  2010-07-09       Impact factor: 4.295

3.  Six years of ecosystem-atmosphere greenhouse gas fluxes measured in a sub-boreal forest.

Authors:  Andrew D Richardson; David Y Hollinger; Julie K Shoemaker; Holly Hughes; Kathleen Savage; Eric A Davidson
Journal:  Sci Data       Date:  2019-07-05       Impact factor: 6.444

4.  Management Impacts on Carbon Dynamics in a Sierra Nevada Mixed Conifer Forest.

Authors:  Sabina Dore; Danny L Fry; Brandon M Collins; Rodrigo Vargas; Robert A York; Scott L Stephens
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-02-26       Impact factor: 3.752

5.  A considerable fraction of soil-respired CO2 is not emitted directly to the atmosphere.

Authors:  Enrique P Sánchez-Cañete; Greg A Barron-Gafford; Jon Chorover
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-09-10       Impact factor: 4.379

  5 in total

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