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Seasonal variation and temperature sensitivity of soil respiration under different plant communities along an elevation gradient in Wuyi Mountains of China.

SHI Zheng1,4;WANG Jia-she2;HE Rong1,3;WANG Guo-bing1;FANG Yan-hong2;XU Zi-kun2;ZHANG Zeng-xin1;RUAN Hong-hua1   

  1. 1Jiangsu Provincival Key Laboratory of Forestry Ecological Engineering, College of Forest Resources and Environmental Science, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing 210037, China; 2Administration Bureau of National Nature Reserve of Wuyi Mountains, Wuyishan 354315, Fujian, China; 3Bureau of Argo-forestry and Water Conservancy of Jiangbei District, Ningbo 315020, Zhejiang, China; 4Faculty of Agricultural, Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, T6G 2E3
  • Received:2008-01-03 Revised:1900-01-01 Online:2008-11-20 Published:2008-11-20

Abstract: Taking the National Nature Reserve in Wuyi Mountains as experimental site, the seasonal variation and temperature sensitivity of soil respiration under four plant communities along an elevation gradient were studied, with their relations to the main environmental factors analyzed. The results showed that the soil respiration under the four plant communities had the same seasonal pattern, with the maximum (3.10-6.57 μmol CO2·m-2·s-1) occurred in summer and the minimum (0.27-1.15 μmol CO2·m-2·s-1) in winter. Soil respiration rate had a significant exponential correlation with soil temperature, but its correlations with soil moisture and litter input differed with plant communities. The Q10 value of soil respiration was higher at high elevation than at low elevation. In mid-subtropical regions, the seasonal variation of soil respiration at different elevations was mainly controlled by soil temperature, indicating that in the case of global warming in the future, soils at higher elevation might release more CO2 to the atmosphere.

Key words: Zoige, net primary productivity (NPP), climate response, spatio-temporal variation characteristics