Department of Chemistry, Uppsala BioCenter, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences P.O. Box 7015, SE-75007, Uppsala, Sweden ; Department of Soil and Environment, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences P.O. Box 7014, SE-75007, Uppsala, Sweden.
Department of Soil and Environment, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences P.O. Box 7014, SE-75007, Uppsala, Sweden.
Ecol Evol. 2013 Dec;3(16):5177-88. doi: 10.1002/ece3.895. Epub 2013 Nov 25.
Boreal ecosystems store one-third of global soil organic carbon (SOC) and are particularly sensitive to climate warming and higher nutrient inputs. Thus, a better description of how forest managements such as nutrient fertilization impact soil carbon (C) and its temperature sensitivity is needed to better predict feedbacks between C cycling and climate. The temperature sensitivity of in situ soil C respiration was investigated in a boreal forest, which has received long-term nutrient fertilization (22 years), and compared with the temperature sensitivity of C mineralization measured in the laboratory. We found that the fertilization treatment increased both the response of soil in situ CO2 effluxes to a warming treatment and the temperature sensitivity of C mineralization measured in the laboratory (Q10). These results suggested that soil C may be more sensitive to an increase in temperature in long-term fertilized in comparison with nutrient poor boreal ecosystems. Furthermore, the fertilization treatment modified the SOC content and the microbial community composition, but we found no direct relationship between either SOC or microbial changes and the temperature sensitivity of C mineralization. However, the relation between the soil C:N ratio and the fungal/bacterial ratio was changed in the combined warmed and fertilized treatment compared with the other treatments, which suggest that strong interaction mechanisms may occur between nutrient input and warming in boreal soils. Further research is needed to unravel into more details in how far soil organic matter and microbial community composition changes are responsible for the change in the temperature sensitivity of soil C under increasing mineral N inputs. Such research would help to take into account the effect of fertilization managements on soil C storage in C cycling numerical models.
北方生态系统储存了全球土壤有机碳 (SOC) 的三分之一,对气候变暖以及更高的养分输入特别敏感。因此,需要更好地描述森林管理(如施肥)如何影响土壤碳及其对温度的敏感性,以便更好地预测碳循环与气候之间的反馈。在接受长期养分施肥(22 年)的北方森林中,研究了原位土壤 C 呼吸对温度的敏感性,并与实验室测量的 C 矿化的温度敏感性进行了比较。我们发现,施肥处理增加了土壤原位 CO2 排放对增温处理的响应,以及实验室测量的 C 矿化的温度敏感性(Q10)。这些结果表明,与养分贫瘠的北方生态系统相比,长期施肥可能使土壤 C 对温度升高更加敏感。此外,施肥处理改变了 SOC 含量和微生物群落组成,但我们发现 SOC 或微生物变化与 C 矿化的温度敏感性之间没有直接关系。然而,与其他处理相比,在变暖施肥处理中,土壤 C:N 比与真菌/细菌比之间的关系发生了变化,这表明养分输入与北方土壤变暖之间可能存在强烈的相互作用机制。需要进一步的研究来详细了解在增加矿质氮输入下,土壤有机质和微生物群落组成的变化在多大程度上导致土壤 C 对温度敏感性的变化。此类研究将有助于在碳循环数值模型中考虑施肥管理对土壤 C 储存的影响。