Department of Forest Ecology, Federal Research and Training Centre for Forests, Natural Hazards and Landscape - BFW, A-1131, Vienna, Austria.
Glob Chang Biol. 2014 Feb;20(2):622-32. doi: 10.1111/gcb.12367. Epub 2013 Dec 30.
Climate change might alter annual snowfall patterns and modify the duration and magnitude of snow cover in temperate regions with resultant impacts on soil microclimate and soil CO2 efflux (Fsoil ). We used a 5-year time series of Fsoil measurements from a mid-elevation forest to assess the effects of naturally changing snow cover. Snow cover varied considerably in duration (105-154 days) and depth (mean snow depth 19-59 cm). Periodically shallow snow cover (<10 cm) caused soil freezing or increased variation in soil temperature. This was mostly not reflected in Fsoil which tended to decrease gradually throughout winter. Progressively decreasing C substrate availability (identified by substrate induced respiration) likely over-rid the effects of slowly changing soil temperatures and determined the overall course of Fsoil . Cumulative CO2 efflux from beneath snow cover varied between 0.46 and 0.95 t C ha(-1) yr(-1) and amounted to between 6 and 12% of the annual efflux. When compared over a fixed interval (the longest period of snow cover during the 5 years), the cumulative CO2 efflux ranged between 0.77 and 1.18 t C ha(-1) or between 11 and 15% of the annual soil CO2 efflux. The relative contribution (15%) was highest during the year with the shortest winter. Variations in snow cover were not reflected in the annual CO2 efflux (7.44-8.41 t C ha(-1) ) which did not differ significantly between years and did not correlate with any snow parameter. Regional climate at our site was characterized by relatively high amounts of precipitation. Therefore, snow did not play a role in terms of water supply during the warm season and primarily affected cold season processes. The role of changing snow cover therefore seems rather marginal when compared to potential climate change effects on Fsoil during the warm season.
气候变化可能会改变温带地区的年降雪模式,并改变积雪的持续时间和厚度,从而影响土壤小气候和土壤 CO2 排放(Fsoil)。我们使用了来自中海拔森林的 5 年 Fsoil 测量时间序列来评估自然变化的积雪覆盖的影响。积雪的持续时间(105-154 天)和深度(平均积雪深度 19-59 厘米)差异很大。周期性的浅层积雪(<10 厘米)会导致土壤冻结或增加土壤温度的变化。这在 Fsoil 中并没有反映出来,Fsoil 在整个冬季逐渐下降。逐渐减少的 C 底物可用性(通过基质诱导呼吸确定)可能会超过缓慢变化的土壤温度的影响,并决定 Fsoil 的总体趋势。积雪下的累积 CO2 排放变化在 0.46 和 0.95 t C ha-1 yr-1 之间,占年排放量的 6-12%。在固定间隔(5 年内最长的积雪期)上进行比较时,累积 CO2 排放量在 0.77 和 1.18 t C ha-1 之间,或占年土壤 CO2 排放量的 11-15%。在冬季最短的那一年,相对贡献(15%)最高。积雪覆盖的变化并没有反映在年 CO2 排放量(7.44-8.41 t C ha-1)中,各年之间没有显著差异,也与任何积雪参数无关。我们所在地区的区域气候以相对较高的降水量为特征。因此,在温暖季节,雪在供水方面不起作用,主要影响寒冷季节的过程。因此,与温暖季节 Fsoil 潜在气候变化影响相比,积雪变化的作用似乎相当微不足道。