Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke), Helsinki, Finland.
Glob Chang Biol. 2019 May;25(5):1852-1867. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14594. Epub 2019 Mar 20.
Globally 40-70 Pg of carbon (C) are stored in coarse woody debris on the forest floor. Climate change may reduce the function of this stock as a C sink in the future due to increasing temperature. However, current knowledge on the drivers of wood decomposition is inadequate for detailed predictions. To define the factors that control wood respiration rate of Norway spruce and to produce a model that adequately describes the decomposition process of this species as a function of time, we used an unprecedentedly diverse analytical approach, which included measurements of respiration, fungal community sequencing, N fixation rate, nifH copy number, C-dating as well as N%, δ C and C% values of wood. Our results suggest that climate change will accelerate C flux from deadwood in boreal conditions, due to the observed strong temperature dependency of deadwood respiration. At the research site, the annual C flux from deadwood would increase by 27% from the current 117 g C/kg wood with the projected climate warming (RCP4.5). The second most important control on respiration rate was the stage of wood decomposition; at early stages of decomposition low nitrogen content and low wood moisture limited fungal activity while reduced wood resource quality decreased the respiration rate at the final stages of decomposition. Wood decomposition process was best described by a Sigmoidal model, where after 116 years of wood decomposition mass loss of 95% was reached. Our results on deadwood decomposition are important for C budget calculations in ecosystem and climate change models. We observed for the first time that the temperature dependency of N fixation, which has a major role at providing N for wood-inhabiting fungi, was not constant but varied between wood density classes due to source supply and wood quality. This has significant consequences on projecting N fixation rates for deadwood in changing climate.
全球有 40-70 太字节(Pg)的碳(C)储存在森林地表的粗木质残体中。由于温度升高,未来气候变化可能会降低这一碳汇的功能。然而,目前对于木质分解的驱动因素的了解还不足以进行详细的预测。为了确定控制挪威云杉木质呼吸速率的因素,并建立一个能够充分描述该物种分解过程的模型,我们采用了一种前所未有的多样化分析方法,其中包括呼吸测量、真菌群落测序、固氮速率、nifH 拷贝数、C 测年以及木质的 N%、δC 和 C%值。我们的研究结果表明,由于观察到木质呼吸对温度的强烈依赖性,气候变化将加速北方条件下枯木的 C 通量。在研究地点,与当前的 117g C/kg 木质相比,随着预计的气候变暖(RCP4.5),枯木的年 C 通量将增加 27%。对呼吸速率的第二大控制因素是木质分解的阶段;在分解的早期阶段,低氮含量和低木质水分限制了真菌的活性,而木质资源质量的降低则降低了分解后期的呼吸速率。木质分解过程最能被 Sigmoidal 模型描述,其中木质分解 116 年后,质量损失达到 95%。我们对枯木分解的研究结果对于生态系统和气候变化模型中的 C 预算计算很重要。我们首次观察到,为木质中真菌提供氮的固氮作用的温度依赖性不是恒定的,而是由于源供应和木质质量的不同,在木质密度类别之间发生变化。这对预测气候变化中枯木的固氮速率有重大影响。