Warming exerts greater impacts on subsoil than topsoil CO2 efflux in a subtropical forest

2018 
Abstract How warming affects the magnitude of CO 2 fluxes within the soil profile remains an important question, with implications for modeling the response of ecosystem carbon balance to changing climate. Information on belowground responses to warming is especially limited for the tropics and subtropics because the majority of manipulative studies have been conducted in temperate and boreal regions. We examined how artificial warming affected CO 2 gas production and exchange across soil profiles in a replicated mesocosms experiment relying on heavily weathered subtropical soils and planted with Chinese fir ( Cunninghamia lanceolata ). Half of 2 × 2 m mesocosms (5 replications) was heated with cables buried at a 10 cm depth, which increased temperature in the whole soil profile by 4.5, 3.6 and 2.5 °C at 15, 30 and 60 cm soil depths, respectively. Using a combination of chamber-based and concentration gradient method (CGM) approaches, we found that warming increased soil CO 2 efflux across the whole profile by 40%. Changes were unevenly distributed across soil depth: mean CO 2 production rate decreased from 0.74 to 0.67 μmol CO 2 m −2 s −1 in topsoils (0–15 cm depth) whereas it increased from 0.26 to 0.73 μmol CO 2 m −2 s −1 in subsoils (15–60 cm depth). Warming reduced moisture more strongly in subsurface than surface soils and increased subsoil soluble N concentrations as well as fine root turnover, in line with previous temperate and boreal warming studies. This consistency indicates that overall responses of subtropical forests to warming may be similar to forests in higher latitudes.
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