4.7 Article

Characterizing the impact of diffusive and advective soil gas transport on the measurement and interpretation of the isotopic signal of soil respiration

期刊

SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY
卷 42, 期 3, 页码 435-444

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2009.11.022

关键词

Soil respiration; Carbon isotope; Advection; Diffusion; Steady-state; Partitioning; Douglas-fir forest

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB 0132737, DEB 0416060]
  2. Ecoinformatics IGERT at OSU
  3. Direct For Biological Sciences
  4. Division Of Environmental Biology [0823380] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

By measuring the isotopic signature of soil respiration, we seek to learn the isotopic composition of the carbon respired in the soil (delta C-13(R-S)) So that we may draw inferences about ecosystem processes. Requisite to this goal is the need to understand how delta C-13(R-S) is affected by both contributions of multiple carbon sources to respiration and fractionation due to soil gas transport. In this study, we measured potential isotopic sources to determine their contributions to delta C-13(R-S) and we performed a series of experiments to investigate the impact of soil gas transport on delta C-13(R-S) estimates. The objectives of these experiments were to: i) compare estimates of delta C-13(R-S) derived from aboveground and belowground techniques, ii) evaluate the roles of diffusion and advection in a forest soil on the estimates of delta C-13(R-S), and iii) determine the contribution of new and old carbon sources to delta C-13(R-S) for a Douglas-fir stand in the Pacific Northwest during our measurement period. We found a maximum difference of -2.36 parts per thousand between estimates of delta C-13(R-S) based on aboveground vs. belowground measurements: the aboveground estimate was enriched relative to the belowground estimate. Soil gas transport during the experiment was primarily by diffusion and the average belowground estimate of delta C-13(R-S) was enriched by 3.8-4.0 parts per thousand with respect to the source estimates from steady-state transport models. The affect of natural fluctuations in advective soil gas transport was little to non-existent; however, an advection-diffusion model was more accurate than a model based solely on diffusion in predicting the isotopic samples near the soil surface. Thus, estimates made from belowground gas samples will improve with an increase in samples near the soil surface. We measured a -1 parts per thousand difference in delta C-13(R-S) as a result of an experiment where advection was induced, a value which may represent an upper limit in fractionation due to advective gas transport in forest ecosystems. We found that aboveground measurements of delta C-13(R-S) may be particularly susceptible to atmospheric incursion, which may produce estimates that are enriched in C-13. The partitioning results attributed 69-98% of soil respiration to a source with a highly depleted isotopic signature similar to that of water-soluble carbon from foliage measured at our site. (C) 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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