Literature DB >> 17470146

Are ecosystem carbon inputs and outputs coupled at short time scales? A case study from adjacent pine and hardwood forests using impulse-response analysis.

Paul C Stoy1, Sari Palmroth, A Christopher Oishi, Mario B S Siqueira, Jehn-Yih Juang, Kimberly A Novick, Eric J Ward, Gabriel G Katul, Ram Oren.   

Abstract

A number of recent studies have attributed a large proportion of soil respiration (R(soil)) to recently photoassimilated carbon (C). Time lags (tau(PR)) associated with these pulses of photosynthesis and responses of R(soil) have been found on time scales of hours to weeks for different ecosystems, but most studies find evidence for tau(PR) on the order of 1-5 d. We showed that such time scales are commensurate with CO(2) diffusion time scales from the roots to the soil surface, and may thus be independent from photosynthetic pulses. To further quantify the role of physical (i.e. edaphic) and biological (i.e. vegetative) controls on such lags, we investigated tau(PR) at adjacent planted pine (PP) and hardwood (HW) forest ecosystems over six and four measurement years, respectively, using both autocorrelation analysis on automated soil surface flux measurements and their lagged cross-correlations with drivers for and surrogates of photosynthesis. Evidence for tau(PR) on the order of 1-3 d was identified in both ecosystems and using both analyses, but this lag could not be attributed to recently photoassimilated C because the same analysis yielded comparable lags at HW during leaf-off periods. Future efforts to model ecosystem C inputs and outputs in a pulse-response framework must combine measurements of transport in the physical and biological components of terrestrial ecosystems.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17470146     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3040.2007.01655.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Cell Environ        ISSN: 0140-7791            Impact factor:   7.228


  2 in total

1.  Temporal dynamics of the carbon isotope composition in a Pinus sylvestris stand: from newly assimilated organic carbon to respired carbon dioxide.

Authors:  Naomi Kodama; Romain L Barnard; Yann Salmon; Christopher Weston; Juan Pedro Ferrio; Jutta Holst; Roland A Werner; Matthias Saurer; Heinz Rennenberg; Nina Buchmann; Arthur Gessler
Journal:  Oecologia       Date:  2008-04-05       Impact factor: 3.225

2.  Impact of environmental factors and biological soil crust types on soil respiration in a desert ecosystem.

Authors:  Wei Feng; Yuqing Zhang; Xin Jia; Bin Wu; Tianshan Zha; Shugao Qin; Ben Wang; Chenxi Shao; Jiabin Liu; Keyu Fa
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-07-22       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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