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Patrik Vestin

Forskningsingenjör

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Heterotrophic and rhizospheric respiration in coniferous forest soils along a latitudinal gradient

Författare

  • Mari Mäki
  • Kira Ryhti
  • Istem Fer
  • Boris Ťupek
  • Patrik Vestin
  • Marilyn Roland
  • Irene Lehner
  • Egle Köster
  • Aleksi Lehtonen
  • Jaana Bäck
  • Jussi Heinonsalo
  • Jukka Pumpanen
  • Liisa Kulmala

Summary, in English

Northern forest soils are a major carbon (C) reservoir of global importance. To estimate how the C balance in these soils will change, the roles of tree roots and soil microbes in C balance should first be decoupled. This study determined how the activity of heterotrophs and tree roots together with root-associated microbes in the rhizosphere varies in coniferous forest soils in boreal, hemiboreal, and temperate climates along a latitudinal gradient using a trenching approach. We created experimental plots without living tree roots, measured soil respiration (CO2 efflux) from these and from unmanipulated plots using the chamber technique, and partitioned the efflux into root-rhizosphere (RR) and heterotrophic (RH) respiration. The share of RR in ecosystem gross
primary production (GPP) decreased from north to south in the Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) and the Norway spruce (Picea abies (L.) Karst.) forests, with the exception of a mixed site, where the share of RR in GPP varied strongly between the years. RR per ground area and per root biomass were mainly independent of climate within the gradient. RH per ground area increased from north to south with temperature, while RH per soil C did not change with temperature. Soil moisture did not significantly affect the respiration components in the northernmost site, whereas soil moisture was positively connected with RH and negatively with RR in other Scots pine sites and positively connected with RR in pure Norway spruce stands. The dynamic ecosystem model LPJ-GUESS
was able to capture the seasonal dynamics of RH and RR at the sites, but overall accuracy varied markedly between the sites, as the model underestimated RH in the southern site and RR elsewhere. Our study provides knowledge about the nature of soil respiration components. The valuable insights can be used in more accurate land-ecosystem modelling of forest ecosystems.

Avdelning/ar

  • Institutionen för naturgeografi och ekosystemvetenskap
  • ICOS Sweden
  • Centrum för miljö- och klimatvetenskap (CEC)

Publiceringsår

2022-04-15

Språk

Engelska

Publikation/Tidskrift/Serie

Agricultural and Forest Meteorology

Volym

317

Dokumenttyp

Artikel i tidskrift

Förlag

Elsevier

Ämne

  • Climate Research
  • Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences

Nyckelord

  • Chamber measurements
  • Land-surface modelling
  • Soil carbon
  • Soil respiration
  • Trenching
  • CO2 efflux
  • Scots pine
  • Norway spruce
  • Forest soil
  • Carbon cycle

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Övrigt

  • ISSN: 1873-2240