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Soil respiration dynamics and its controlling factors of typical vegetation communities on meadow steppes in the western Songnen Plain.

WANG Ming1,2, LIU Xing-tu1, LI Xiu-jun1, ZHANG Ji-tao1, WANG Guo-dong1,2, LU Xin-rui1, LI Xiao-yu1   

  1. (1Northeast Institute of Geography and Agroecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changchun 130102, China; 2University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China)
  • Online:2014-01-18 Published:2014-01-18

Abstract: In order to accurately explore the soil respiration dynamics and its controlling factors of typical vegetation types in the western Songnen Plain, soil respiration rates of Chloris virgata, Puccinellia distans, Phragmites australis and Leymus chinensis communities were measured. The results showed that the diurnal curves of soil respiration rates of the four vegetation communities had simple peak values, which appeared at 11:00-15:00, and the valley values occurred at 21:00-1:00 or 3:00-5:00. The seasonal dynamic patterns of their soil respiration rates were similar, with the maximum (3.21-4.84 μmol CO2· m-2· s-1) occurring in July and August and the minimum (0.46-1.51 μmol CO2· m-2· s-1) in October. The soil respiration rates of the four vegetation communities had significant exponential correlations with ambient air temperature and soil temperature. Soil moisture, however, only played an important role in affecting the soil respiration rate of C. virgata community while air humidity near the soil surface was significantly correlated with the soil respiration rates of P. australis and L. chinensis communities. The soil salt contents seriously constrained the CO2 dioxide emission, and the soil pH, electrical conductivity (EC), exchangeable sodium percentage (ESP) could explain 87%-91% spatial variations of the soil respiration rate.