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Variation of  net ecosystem carbon flux in growing season and its driving factors in a poplar plantation from Hung-tse Lake wetland.

XU Yong-feng1,2, JI Huai2, HAN Jian-gang1,2, XUE Tong-liang2, ZHU Yong-li1,2*, LI Ping-ping2,3   

  1. (1College of Biology and the Environment,Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing 210037, China; 2National Positioning Observation Station of Hungtse Lake Wetland Ecosystem in Jiangsu Province, Nanjing 210037, China; 3Collaborative Innovation Center of Sustainable Forestry in Southern China of Jiangsu Province, Nanjing 210037, China).
  • Online:2018-02-10 Published:2018-02-10

Abstract:

Fluctuations of water level in Hung-tse Lake are induced by the regional increasingirrigation demands and normalized water transfer with the operation of the SouthtoNorth water diversion project, with consequences on soil moisture and wetland vegetation. A poplar plantation in Hung-tse Lake wetland was selected to investigate the dynamics of CO2 flux and its influencing factors during the growing season (April to September) using the system of eddy covariance in 2016. The results showed that a typical daily and monthly variation characterized the changes of net ecosystem CO2 exchange (NEE) and environmental factors across the whole growing season. The monthly meanNEE showed a general “U” type curve with1758.10 g CO2·m-2 of accumulatedNEE, implying that the plantation was a carbon sink in the growing season. There was ahyperbolic relationship between the photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) and daytime netecosystem CO2 exchange (NEEd).PAR accounted for 34.3%-75.5% of the variation ofNEEd in the growing season. A significant exponential function relationship between soil temperature (Ts) at 5 cm depth and nighttime net ecosystem CO2 exchange (NEEn) was found, andTs explained38.9%-55.2% of the variation inNEEn. Soil water content, net radiation (Rn) and vaporpressure deficit mainly dominated the daily variation of CO2 flux, while the monthly variation of CO2 flux was mainly affected by rainfall and soil moisture. Therefore, changes of soil moisture in the wetlands, affected by the fluctuations of water level in Hung-tse Lake, would potentiallyaffect ecosystem carbon sequestration.
 

Key words: soil microbial community, Biolog-Eco, diversity, close-to-nature management