Sayer Emma J, Powers Jennifer S, Tanner Edmund V J
Department of Plant Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2007 Dec 12;2(12):e1299. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0001299.
Aboveground litter production in forests is likely to increase as a consequence of elevated atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO(2)) concentrations, rising temperatures, and shifting rainfall patterns. As litterfall represents a major flux of carbon from vegetation to soil, changes in litter inputs are likely to have wide-reaching consequences for soil carbon dynamics. Such disturbances to the carbon balance may be particularly important in the tropics because tropical forests store almost 30% of the global soil carbon, making them a critical component of the global carbon cycle; nevertheless, the effects of increasing aboveground litter production on belowground carbon dynamics are poorly understood. We used long-term, large-scale monthly litter removal and addition treatments in a lowland tropical forest to assess the consequences of increased litterfall on belowground CO(2) production. Over the second to the fifth year of treatments, litter addition increased soil respiration more than litter removal decreased it; soil respiration was on average 20% lower in the litter removal and 43% higher in the litter addition treatment compared to the controls but litter addition did not change microbial biomass. We predicted a 9% increase in soil respiration in the litter addition plots, based on the 20% decrease in the litter removal plots and an 11% reduction due to lower fine root biomass in the litter addition plots. The 43% measured increase in soil respiration was therefore 34% higher than predicted and it is possible that this 'extra' CO(2) was a result of priming effects, i.e. stimulation of the decomposition of older soil organic matter by the addition of fresh organic matter. Our results show that increases in aboveground litter production as a result of global change have the potential to cause considerable losses of soil carbon to the atmosphere in tropical forests.
由于大气中二氧化碳(CO₂)浓度升高、气温上升和降雨模式变化,森林地上凋落物产量可能会增加。由于凋落物是碳从植被向土壤流动的主要通量,凋落物输入的变化可能会对土壤碳动态产生广泛影响。这种对碳平衡的干扰在热带地区可能尤为重要,因为热带森林储存了全球近30%的土壤碳,使其成为全球碳循环的关键组成部分;然而,地上凋落物产量增加对地下碳动态的影响却知之甚少。我们在低地热带森林中采用长期、大规模的每月凋落物去除和添加处理,以评估凋落物增加对地下CO₂产生的影响。在处理的第二年到第五年,添加凋落物比去除凋落物更能增加土壤呼吸;与对照相比,去除凋落物处理的土壤呼吸平均降低了20%,添加凋落物处理的土壤呼吸平均升高了43%,但添加凋落物并未改变微生物生物量。基于去除凋落物处理中土壤呼吸降低20%以及添加凋落物处理中细根生物量降低11%,我们预测添加凋落物的地块土壤呼吸将增加9%。因此,实测的土壤呼吸增加43%比预测值高34%,这种“额外”的CO₂可能是激发效应的结果,即添加新鲜有机物质刺激了较老土壤有机质的分解。我们的结果表明,全球变化导致的地上凋落物产量增加有可能使热带森林的土壤碳大量流失到大气中。