4.7 Article

Soil respiration and carbon loss relationship with temperature and land use conversion in freeze-thaw agricultural area

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 533, Issue -, Pages 215-222

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.06.109

Keywords

Soil respiration; Soil carbon dynamics; Soil temperature; Land use conversion; Freeze-thawing area

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41371018]
  2. Supporting Program of the Twelfth Five-year Plan for Science & Technology Research of China [2012BAD15B05]

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Soil respiration (R-s) was hypothesized to have a special response pattern to soil temperature and land use conversion in the freeze-thaw area. The R-s differences of eight types of land use conversions during agricultural development were observed and the impacts of R-s on soil organic carbon (SOC) loss were assessed. The land use conversions during last three decades were categorized into eight types, and the 141 SOC sampling sites were grouped by conversion type. The typical soil sampling sites were subsequently selected for monitoring of soil temperature and R-s of each land use conversion types. The R-s correlations with temperature at difference depths and different conversion types were identified with statistical analysis. The empirical mean error model and the biophysical theoretical model with Arrhenius equation about the R-s sensitivity to temperature were both analyzed and shared the similar patterns. The temperature dependence of soil respiration (Q(10)) analysis further demonstrated that the averaged value of eight types of land use in this freeze-thaw agricultural area ranged from 1.15 to 1.73, which was lower than the other cold areas. The temperature dependence analysis demonstrated that the R-s in the top layer of natural land covers was more sensitive to temperature and experienced a large vertical difference. The natural land covers exhibited smaller R-s and the farmlands had the bigger value due to tillage practices. The positive relationships between SOC loss and R-s were identified, which demonstrated that R-s was the key chain for SOC loss during land use conversion. The spatial-vertical distributions of SOC concentration with the 1.5-km grid sampling showed that the more SOC loss in the farmland, which was coincided with the higher R-s in farmlands. The analysis of R-s dynamics provided an innovative explanation for SOC loss in the freeze-thaw agricultural area. The analysis of R-s dynamics provided an innovative explanation for SOC loss in the freeze-thaw agricultural area. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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