| Literature DB >> 27849609 |
Joanna C Carey1, Jianwu Tang1, Pamela H Templer2, Kevin D Kroeger3, Thomas W Crowther4,5, Andrew J Burton6, Jeffrey S Dukes7,8,9, Bridget Emmett10, Serita D Frey11, Mary A Heskel12, Lifen Jiang13, Megan B Machmuller14, Jacqueline Mohan15, Anne Marie Panetta16, Peter B Reich17,18, Sabine Reinsch10, Xin Wang19, Steven D Allison20,21, Chris Bamminger22, Scott Bridgham23, Scott L Collins24, Giovanbattista de Dato25, William C Eddy26, Brian J Enquist27, Marc Estiarte28,29, John Harte30,31, Amanda Henderson27, Bart R Johnson32, Klaus Steenberg Larsen33, Yiqi Luo13, Sven Marhan22, Jerry M Melillo12, Josep Peñuelas28,29, Laurel Pfeifer-Meister23,34, Christian Poll22, Edward Rastetter12, Andrew B Reinmann2, Lorien L Reynolds23, Inger K Schmidt33, Gaius R Shaver12, Aaron L Strong35, Vidya Suseela36, Albert Tietema37.
Abstract
The respiratory release of carbon dioxide (CO2) from soil is a major yet poorly understood flux in the global carbon cycle. Climatic warming is hypothesized to increase rates of soil respiration, potentially fueling further increases in global temperatures. However, despite considerable scientific attention in recent decades, the overall response of soil respiration to anticipated climatic warming remains unclear. We synthesize the largest global dataset to date of soil respiration, moisture, and temperature measurements, totaling >3,800 observations representing 27 temperature manipulation studies, spanning nine biomes and over 2 decades of warming. Our analysis reveals no significant differences in the temperature sensitivity of soil respiration between control and warmed plots in all biomes, with the exception of deserts and boreal forests. Thus, our data provide limited evidence of acclimation of soil respiration to experimental warming in several major biome types, contrary to the results from multiple single-site studies. Moreover, across all nondesert biomes, respiration rates with and without experimental warming follow a Gaussian response, increasing with soil temperature up to a threshold of ∼25 °C, above which respiration rates decrease with further increases in temperature. This consistent decrease in temperature sensitivity at higher temperatures demonstrates that rising global temperatures may result in regionally variable responses in soil respiration, with colder climates being considerably more responsive to increased ambient temperatures compared with warmer regions. Our analysis adds a unique cross-biome perspective on the temperature response of soil respiration, information critical to improving our mechanistic understanding of how soil carbon dynamics change with climatic warming.Entities:
Keywords: biome; climate change; experimental warming; soil respiration; temperature sensitivity
Year: 2016 PMID: 27849609 PMCID: PMC5137763 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1605365113
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205