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Variation of soil respiration and its underlying mechanism in grasslands of northern China.

HOU Jian-feng1,2, LU Xiao-tao1, WANG Chao1, WANG Peng1   

  1. (1State Key Laboratory of Forest and Soil Ecology, Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenyang 110164, China; 2University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China)
  • Online:2014-10-18 Published:2014-10-18

Abstract:

Soil respiration is one of the most important variables in terrestrial ecosystem progresses and global carbon cycle, and determines the CO2 flux from soil to atmosphere. Soil respiration also has great implications for predicting regional and even global carbon cycle changes under the background of global climate change. We measured respiration rates of soil samples collected from northern China grassland transect by short term incubation experiment in laboratory. Results showed that soil respiration rates increased with mean annual precipitation (MAP) from west sites to east sites, ranging from 0.35 to 2.09 μg CO2C·g-1·h-1. The variation range of soil respiration rates were 0.35-0.73 μg CO2C·g-1·h-1 with MAP<100 mm, 0.57-0.98 μg CO2C·g-1·h-1 with MAP between 100 mm and 200 mm and 0.83-2.10 μg CO2C·g-1·h-1 with MAP>300 mm, respectively. Soil respiration had a significant positive relationship with MAP, aboveground biomass, soil organic carbon and nitrogen content, while had a negative relationship with mean annual temperature and soil pH. Analysis of boosted regression tree showed that the predictors accounted for the explained variation included MAP (25.5%), aboveground biomass (23.6%), soil organic carbon content (18.3%) and soil organic nitrogen content (12.5%), and soil pH and mean annual temperature only explained 10.8% and 9.2% of the total variation, respectively.