Fitter A H, Graves J D, Self G K, Brown T K, Bogie D S, Taylor K
Department of Biology, University of York, York YO1 5YW, UK fax: 01904 432860; e-mail:
Institute of Terrestrial Ecology, Merlewood Research Station, Cumbria LA11 6JU, UK, , , , , , GB.
Oecologia. 1998 Mar;114(1):20-30. doi: 10.1007/s004420050415.
We have measured the rates of root production and death and of root respiration in situ under two grasslands along an altitudinal gradient in the northern Pennines, UK, represented by a lowland site at 171 m in an agricultural setting, and three upland sites between 480 and 845 m. One grassland was dominated by Festuca ovina and was on a brown earth soil; the other was dominated by Juncus squarrosus and Nardus stricta and occurred on a peaty gley. The natural altitudinal gradient was extended by transplantation. Although root biomass and root production (estimated using minirhizotrons) both showed pronounced seasonal peaks, there was no simple altitudinal gradient in either variable, and neither root production nor root death rate was a simple function of altitude. Increased root accumulation in summer was a function of change in the length of the growing season, not of soil temperature. Root populations in winter were similar at all sites, showing that increased production at some sites was accompanied by increased turnover, a conclusion confirmed by cohort analyses. Respiration rate, measured in the field by extracting roots and measuring respiration at field temperature in an incubator, was unrelated to temperature. The temperature sensitivity of respiration (expressed as the slope of a plot of log respiration rate against temperature) showed no simple seasonal or altitudinal pattern. Both root growth (under Festuca) and respiration rate were, however, closely related to radiation fluxes, averaged over the previous 10 days for growth and 2 days for respiration. The temperature sensitivity of respiration was a function of soil temperature at the time of measurement. These results show that root growth and the consequent input of carbon to soil in these communities is controlled by radiation flux not temperature, and that plants growing in these upland environments may acclimate strongly to low temperatures. Most carbon cycle models assume that carbon fluxes to soil are powerfully influenced by temperature, but that assumption is based largely on short-term studies and must be reassessed.
我们在英国奔宁山脉北部沿海拔梯度的两种草原环境下,原位测量了根系产生、死亡速率以及根系呼吸速率。这两种草原环境分别为海拔171米的低地农业用地,以及海拔480至845米之间的三个高地。一种草原以羊茅为主,土壤为棕壤;另一种以糙叶灯心草和石南为主,土壤为泥炭潜育土。通过移植扩展了自然海拔梯度。尽管根生物量和根系产生量(使用微根管估计)均呈现出明显的季节性峰值,但这两个变量均不存在简单的海拔梯度,根系产生量和根系死亡率都不是海拔的简单函数。夏季根系积累量增加是生长季节长度变化的函数,而非土壤温度的函数。所有地点冬季的根系数量相似,这表明一些地点根系产生量的增加伴随着周转率的提高,这一结论得到了群组分析的证实。通过提取根系并在培养箱中于田间温度下测量呼吸作用来现场测定呼吸速率,其与温度无关。呼吸作用的温度敏感性(以呼吸速率对数与温度的关系图的斜率表示)没有呈现出简单的季节性或海拔模式。然而,根系生长(在羊茅下)和呼吸速率均与辐射通量密切相关,生长的辐射通量取前10天的平均值,呼吸的辐射通量取前2天的平均值。呼吸作用的温度敏感性是测量时土壤温度的函数。这些结果表明,这些群落中的根系生长以及随之而来的碳向土壤中的输入受辐射通量而非温度控制,并且生长在这些高地环境中的植物可能对低温有很强的适应性。大多数碳循环模型假定碳向土壤的通量受温度强烈影响,但该假设主要基于短期研究,必须重新评估。