Vertical partitioning of CO2 production in a forest soil

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Autoren

  • Patrick Wordell-Dietrich
  • Anja Wotte
  • Janet Rethemeyer
  • Jörg Bachmann
  • Mirjam Helfrich
  • Kristina Kirfel
  • Christoph Leuschner
  • Axel Don

Externe Organisationen

  • Technische Universität Dresden
  • Technische Universität Bergakademie Freiberg
  • Universität zu Köln
  • Georg-August-Universität Göttingen
  • Johann Heinrich von Thünen-Institut, Bundesforschungsinstitut für Ländliche Räume, Wald und Fischerei
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Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)6341-6356
Seitenumfang16
FachzeitschriftBIOGEOSCIENCES
Jahrgang17
Ausgabenummer24
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 15 Dez. 2020

Abstract

Large amounts of total organic carbon are temporarily stored in soils, which makes soil respiration one of the major sources of terrestrial CO2 fluxes within the global carbon cycle. More than half of global soil organic carbon (SOC) is stored in subsoils (below 30 cm), which represent a significant carbon (C) pool. Although several studies and models have investigated soil respiration, little is known about the quantitative contribution of subsoils to total soil respiration or about the sources of CO2 production in subsoils. In a 2-year field study in a European beech forest in northern Germany, vertical CO2 concentration profiles were continuously measured at three locations, and CO2 production was quantified in the topsoil and the subsoil. To determine the contribution of fresh litter-derived C to CO2 production in the three soil profiles, an isotopic labelling experiment, using 13C-enriched leaf litter, was performed. Additionally, radiocarbon measurements of CO2 in the soil atmosphere were used to obtain information about the age of the C source in the CO2 production. At the study site, it was found that 90 % of total soil respiration was produced in the first 30 cm of the soil profile, where 53 % of the SOC stock is stored. Freshly labelled litter inputs in the form of dissolved organic matter were only a minor source for CO2 production below a depth of 10 cm. In the first 2 months after litter application, fresh litter-derived C contributed, on average, 1 % at 10 cm depth and 0.1 % at 150 cm depth to CO2 in the soil profile. Thereafter, its contribution was less than 0.3 % and 0.05 % at 10 and 150 cm depths, respectively. Furthermore CO2 in the soil profile had the same modern radiocarbon signature at all depths, indicating that CO2 in the subsoil originated from young C sources despite a radiocarbon age bulk SOC in the subsoil. This suggests that fresh C inputs in subsoils, in the form of roots and root exudates, are rapidly respired, and that other subsoil SOC seems to be relatively stable. The field labelling experiment also revealed a downward diffusion of 13CO2 in the soil profile against the total CO2 gradient. This isotopic dependency should be taken into account when using labelled 13C and 14C isotope data as an age proxy for CO2 sources in the soil.

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Vertical partitioning of CO2 production in a forest soil. / Wordell-Dietrich, Patrick; Wotte, Anja; Rethemeyer, Janet et al.
in: BIOGEOSCIENCES, Jahrgang 17, Nr. 24, 15.12.2020, S. 6341-6356.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Wordell-Dietrich, P, Wotte, A, Rethemeyer, J, Bachmann, J, Helfrich, M, Kirfel, K, Leuschner, C & Don, A 2020, 'Vertical partitioning of CO2 production in a forest soil', BIOGEOSCIENCES, Jg. 17, Nr. 24, S. 6341-6356. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-17-6341-2020
Wordell-Dietrich, P., Wotte, A., Rethemeyer, J., Bachmann, J., Helfrich, M., Kirfel, K., Leuschner, C., & Don, A. (2020). Vertical partitioning of CO2 production in a forest soil. BIOGEOSCIENCES, 17(24), 6341-6356. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-17-6341-2020
Wordell-Dietrich P, Wotte A, Rethemeyer J, Bachmann J, Helfrich M, Kirfel K et al. Vertical partitioning of CO2 production in a forest soil. BIOGEOSCIENCES. 2020 Dez 15;17(24):6341-6356. doi: 10.5194/bg-17-6341-2020
Wordell-Dietrich, Patrick ; Wotte, Anja ; Rethemeyer, Janet et al. / Vertical partitioning of CO2 production in a forest soil. in: BIOGEOSCIENCES. 2020 ; Jahrgang 17, Nr. 24. S. 6341-6356.
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title = "Vertical partitioning of CO2 production in a forest soil",
abstract = "Large amounts of total organic carbon are temporarily stored in soils, which makes soil respiration one of the major sources of terrestrial CO2 fluxes within the global carbon cycle. More than half of global soil organic carbon (SOC) is stored in subsoils (below 30 cm), which represent a significant carbon (C) pool. Although several studies and models have investigated soil respiration, little is known about the quantitative contribution of subsoils to total soil respiration or about the sources of CO2 production in subsoils. In a 2-year field study in a European beech forest in northern Germany, vertical CO2 concentration profiles were continuously measured at three locations, and CO2 production was quantified in the topsoil and the subsoil. To determine the contribution of fresh litter-derived C to CO2 production in the three soil profiles, an isotopic labelling experiment, using 13C-enriched leaf litter, was performed. Additionally, radiocarbon measurements of CO2 in the soil atmosphere were used to obtain information about the age of the C source in the CO2 production. At the study site, it was found that 90 % of total soil respiration was produced in the first 30 cm of the soil profile, where 53 % of the SOC stock is stored. Freshly labelled litter inputs in the form of dissolved organic matter were only a minor source for CO2 production below a depth of 10 cm. In the first 2 months after litter application, fresh litter-derived C contributed, on average, 1 % at 10 cm depth and 0.1 % at 150 cm depth to CO2 in the soil profile. Thereafter, its contribution was less than 0.3 % and 0.05 % at 10 and 150 cm depths, respectively. Furthermore CO2 in the soil profile had the same modern radiocarbon signature at all depths, indicating that CO2 in the subsoil originated from young C sources despite a radiocarbon age bulk SOC in the subsoil. This suggests that fresh C inputs in subsoils, in the form of roots and root exudates, are rapidly respired, and that other subsoil SOC seems to be relatively stable. The field labelling experiment also revealed a downward diffusion of 13CO2 in the soil profile against the total CO2 gradient. This isotopic dependency should be taken into account when using labelled 13C and 14C isotope data as an age proxy for CO2 sources in the soil.",
author = "Patrick Wordell-Dietrich and Anja Wotte and Janet Rethemeyer and J{\"o}rg Bachmann and Mirjam Helfrich and Kristina Kirfel and Christoph Leuschner and Axel Don",
note = "Funding Information: Acknowledgements. We acknowledge support from the open access publication funds of the SLUB/TU Dresden for financing this open access publication. We would like to thank Jens Dyckmanns and Reinhard Langel from the Centre for Stable Isotope Research and Analysis at the University of G{\"o}¨ttingen for the 13CO2 measurements. We also want to thank Frank Hegewald and Martin Volk-mann for their support in the field, especially with changing the heavy (23 kg) batteries in the subsoil observatories every month. We would also like to thank Ullrich Dettmann for his support with R, and many thanks go to Heiner Flessa, Marco Gronwald, Cora Vos and Viridiana Alcantara for the fruitful discussions and recommendations. Finally, we thank the reviewers for their comments. ",
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Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Vertical partitioning of CO2 production in a forest soil

AU - Wordell-Dietrich, Patrick

AU - Wotte, Anja

AU - Rethemeyer, Janet

AU - Bachmann, Jörg

AU - Helfrich, Mirjam

AU - Kirfel, Kristina

AU - Leuschner, Christoph

AU - Don, Axel

N1 - Funding Information: Acknowledgements. We acknowledge support from the open access publication funds of the SLUB/TU Dresden for financing this open access publication. We would like to thank Jens Dyckmanns and Reinhard Langel from the Centre for Stable Isotope Research and Analysis at the University of Gö¨ttingen for the 13CO2 measurements. We also want to thank Frank Hegewald and Martin Volk-mann for their support in the field, especially with changing the heavy (23 kg) batteries in the subsoil observatories every month. We would also like to thank Ullrich Dettmann for his support with R, and many thanks go to Heiner Flessa, Marco Gronwald, Cora Vos and Viridiana Alcantara for the fruitful discussions and recommendations. Finally, we thank the reviewers for their comments.

PY - 2020/12/15

Y1 - 2020/12/15

N2 - Large amounts of total organic carbon are temporarily stored in soils, which makes soil respiration one of the major sources of terrestrial CO2 fluxes within the global carbon cycle. More than half of global soil organic carbon (SOC) is stored in subsoils (below 30 cm), which represent a significant carbon (C) pool. Although several studies and models have investigated soil respiration, little is known about the quantitative contribution of subsoils to total soil respiration or about the sources of CO2 production in subsoils. In a 2-year field study in a European beech forest in northern Germany, vertical CO2 concentration profiles were continuously measured at three locations, and CO2 production was quantified in the topsoil and the subsoil. To determine the contribution of fresh litter-derived C to CO2 production in the three soil profiles, an isotopic labelling experiment, using 13C-enriched leaf litter, was performed. Additionally, radiocarbon measurements of CO2 in the soil atmosphere were used to obtain information about the age of the C source in the CO2 production. At the study site, it was found that 90 % of total soil respiration was produced in the first 30 cm of the soil profile, where 53 % of the SOC stock is stored. Freshly labelled litter inputs in the form of dissolved organic matter were only a minor source for CO2 production below a depth of 10 cm. In the first 2 months after litter application, fresh litter-derived C contributed, on average, 1 % at 10 cm depth and 0.1 % at 150 cm depth to CO2 in the soil profile. Thereafter, its contribution was less than 0.3 % and 0.05 % at 10 and 150 cm depths, respectively. Furthermore CO2 in the soil profile had the same modern radiocarbon signature at all depths, indicating that CO2 in the subsoil originated from young C sources despite a radiocarbon age bulk SOC in the subsoil. This suggests that fresh C inputs in subsoils, in the form of roots and root exudates, are rapidly respired, and that other subsoil SOC seems to be relatively stable. The field labelling experiment also revealed a downward diffusion of 13CO2 in the soil profile against the total CO2 gradient. This isotopic dependency should be taken into account when using labelled 13C and 14C isotope data as an age proxy for CO2 sources in the soil.

AB - Large amounts of total organic carbon are temporarily stored in soils, which makes soil respiration one of the major sources of terrestrial CO2 fluxes within the global carbon cycle. More than half of global soil organic carbon (SOC) is stored in subsoils (below 30 cm), which represent a significant carbon (C) pool. Although several studies and models have investigated soil respiration, little is known about the quantitative contribution of subsoils to total soil respiration or about the sources of CO2 production in subsoils. In a 2-year field study in a European beech forest in northern Germany, vertical CO2 concentration profiles were continuously measured at three locations, and CO2 production was quantified in the topsoil and the subsoil. To determine the contribution of fresh litter-derived C to CO2 production in the three soil profiles, an isotopic labelling experiment, using 13C-enriched leaf litter, was performed. Additionally, radiocarbon measurements of CO2 in the soil atmosphere were used to obtain information about the age of the C source in the CO2 production. At the study site, it was found that 90 % of total soil respiration was produced in the first 30 cm of the soil profile, where 53 % of the SOC stock is stored. Freshly labelled litter inputs in the form of dissolved organic matter were only a minor source for CO2 production below a depth of 10 cm. In the first 2 months after litter application, fresh litter-derived C contributed, on average, 1 % at 10 cm depth and 0.1 % at 150 cm depth to CO2 in the soil profile. Thereafter, its contribution was less than 0.3 % and 0.05 % at 10 and 150 cm depths, respectively. Furthermore CO2 in the soil profile had the same modern radiocarbon signature at all depths, indicating that CO2 in the subsoil originated from young C sources despite a radiocarbon age bulk SOC in the subsoil. This suggests that fresh C inputs in subsoils, in the form of roots and root exudates, are rapidly respired, and that other subsoil SOC seems to be relatively stable. The field labelling experiment also revealed a downward diffusion of 13CO2 in the soil profile against the total CO2 gradient. This isotopic dependency should be taken into account when using labelled 13C and 14C isotope data as an age proxy for CO2 sources in the soil.

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