Literature DB >> 23534206

Soil warming effect on net ecosystem exchange of carbon dioxide during the transition from winter carbon source to spring carbon sink in a temperate urban lawn.

Xiaoping Zhou1, Xiaoke Wang, Lei Tong, Hongxing Zhang, Fei Lu, Feixiang Zheng, Peiqiang Hou, Wenzhi Song, Zhiyun Ouyang.   

Abstract

The significant warming in urban environment caused by the combined effects of global warming and heat island has stimulated widely development of urban vegetations. However, it is less known of the climate feedback of urban lawn in warmed environment. Soil warming effect on net ecosystem exchange (NEE) of carbon dioxide during the transition period from winter to spring was investigated in a temperate urban lawn in Beijing, China. The NEE (negative for uptake) under soil warming treatment (temperature was about 5 degrees C higher than the ambient treatment as a control) was -0.71 micromol/(m2 x sec), the ecosytem was a CO2 sink under soil warming treatment, the lawn ecosystem under the control was a CO2 source (0.13 micromol/(m2 x sec)), indicating that the lawn ecosystem would provide a negative feedback to global warming. There was no significant effect of soil warming on nocturnal NEE (i.e., ecosystem respiration), although the soil temperature sensitivity (Q10) of ecosystem respiration under soil warming treatment was 3.86, much lower than that in the control (7.03). The CO2 uptake was significantly increased by soil warming treatment that was attributed to about 100% increase of alpha (apparent quantum yield) and Amax (maximum rate of photosynthesis). Our results indicated that the response of photosynthesis in urban lawn is much more sensitive to global warming than respiration in the transition period.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23534206     DOI: 10.1016/s1001-0742(11)61057-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Environ Sci (China)        ISSN: 1001-0742            Impact factor:   5.565


  3 in total

1.  Carbon dioxide fluxes in a farmland ecosystem of the southern Chinese Loess Plateau measured using a chamber-based method.

Authors:  Fengru Fang; Xiaoyang Han; Wenzhao Liu; Ming Tang
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2020-04-27       Impact factor: 2.984

Review 2.  Carbon Sequestration in Turfgrass-Soil Systems.

Authors:  Ruying Wang; Clint M Mattox; Claire L Phillips; Alec R Kowalewski
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-09-22

3.  Effects of elevated CO2 and nitrogen deposition on ecosystem carbon fluxes on the Sanjiang plain wetland in Northeast China.

Authors:  Jianbo Wang; Tingcheng Zhu; Hongwei Ni; Haixiu Zhong; Xiaoling Fu; Jifeng Wang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-06-20       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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