| Literature DB >> 24459432 |
Ning Zong1, Peili Shi2, Jing Jiang3, Minghua Song4, Dingpeng Xiong1, Weiling Ma1, Gang Fu2, Xianzhou Zhang2, Zhenxi Shen2.
Abstract
Over the past decades, the Tibetan Plateau has experienced pronounced warming, yet the extent to which warming will affect alpine ecosystems depends on how warming interacts with other influential global change factors, such asEntities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24459432 PMCID: PMC3891229 DOI: 10.1155/2013/415318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ScientificWorldJournal ISSN: 1537-744X
Figure 1Effects of simulated warming on meteorological factors over growing season in 2012. Daytime and nighttime air temperature (T ), soil temperature (T ), and soil water content (Sw) at the depth of 0~5 cm represent the difference between the values inside OTCs and the ambient conditions in daytime (07:30~20:30) and nighttime (00:00~7:30 and 20:30~24:00), respectively. PPT represents the daily precipitation from June 1 to September 30, 2012.
Figure 2Diurnal variations of soil respiration under different treatments in alpine meadow measured on July 22~23 (a) and August 21~22 (b), 2012. CK, control (solid square with dot line); N, N addition (open triangle with dot line); W, warming (solid square with straight line); W + N, warming plus N addition (open triangle with straight line). Values represent the mean ± SE (n = 4).
Figure 3Monthly mean soil respiration over growing season under different treatments in alpine meadow in 2012. See Figure 2 for the abbreviations of treatments.
Repeated-measure analyses of variance (ANOVAs) for ecosystem respiration (Reco), aboveground biomass (AGB), soil inorganic N content, and mineralization rate in 2012. F and P values represent F value of ANOVA results and statistical significance, respectively. The significant level is P < 0.05.
| Model | Reco | AGB | Soil inorganic | Soil N | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| Warming (W) | 8.063 |
| 62.290 |
| 0.004 | 0.948 | 32.108 |
|
| Nitrogen (N) | 3.911 | 0.071 | 53.157 |
| 30.078 |
| 33.617 |
|
| W × N | 0.034 | 0.875 | 2.710 | 0.126 | 3.684 |
| 10.375 |
|
| Date (D) | 31.208 |
| 147.502 |
| 60.798 |
| 494.949 |
|
| D × W | 0.945 | 0.414 | 11.565 |
| 15.222 |
| 251.430 |
|
| D × N | 0.892 | 0.436 | 11.300 |
| 13.242 |
| 54.143 |
|
| D × W × N | 0.268 | 0.801 | 4.614 |
| 62.886 |
| 46.345 |
|
Figure 4Seasonal variations of plant aboveground and belowground biomass over growing season under different treatments in alpine meadow in 2012. See Figure 2 for the abbreviations of treatments.
Figure 5Seasonal variations of soil inorganic N (a) and soil net N mineralization (b) over growing season under different treatments in alpine meadow in 2012. See Figure 2 for the abbreviations of treatments.
Figure 6Dependence of soil respiration on air temperature (A, a), soil temperature (B, b), and soil water content (C, c) on seasonal (A, B, C) and diurnal (a, b, c) scales. Solid circles represent simulated warming treatment (W) and open circles represent ambient treatment (A). NS, ∗, and ∗∗ represent significant levels P ≥ 0.05, P < 0.05, and P < 0.01, respectively. The following is the same. Q 10 represents the sensitivity of ecosystem respiration to temperature.
Figure 7Dependence of soil respiration on aboveground biomass (a) and inorganic N content (b). Solid circles represent simulated warming treatment (W) and open circles represent ambient treatment (a). Regression lines are indicated only for significant correlations, with solid line and dash line for warming and ambient treatment, respectively.
Figure 8Conceptual diagram of experimental warming and N enrichment on ecosystem C and N cycling in semiarid alpine meadow. “+” refers to positive stimulation effect and “−” refers to inhibiting effect.