Titel
Response of Soil CO2 Efflux to Simulated Precipitation Pulses in a Canary Island Pine Forest at Treeline.
Verfasser
Erscheinungsort
New York
Verlag
Erscheinungsjahr
2013
Seiten
S. 178-187
Material
Bandaufführung
Standardsignatur
11128S
Datensatznummer
177970
Quelle
Abstract
Pulse-like rapidly increasing CO2 effluxes occur in soils under seasonally dry climates in response to summer rain events, and these CO2 outbursts can have a marked influence on the ecosystem carbon balance. Two irrigation experiments were conducted at the end of the dry season in a Mediterranean Pinus canariensis forest at its upper distribution limit in Tenerife, Canary Islands. Soil CO2 efflux was discontinuously monitored along with soil temperature and soil water content during and after irrigation. Correlation analysis suggested that soil moisture is the leading environmental factor regulating soil CO2 efflux during summer rain events. Cumulative CO2 efflux following a precipitation pulse was estimated to be 50% higher than the value calculated for the dry soil, which is approximately 3% of the year round soil CO2 efflux. It is concluded that such CO2 effluxes may have implications for the prediction of forest response to increasing dryness combined with an increase in the irregularity of summer rain events in Mediterranean regions.Keywords: birch effect, canary islands pine, respiratory pulses, soil respiration, soil water content