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Disentangling effects of air and soil temperature on C allocation in cold environments: A 14 C pulse‐labelling study with two plant species

机译:空气和土壤温度对寒冷环境中碳分配的解缠作用:一项针对两种植物的14 C脉冲标记研究

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Carbon cycling responses of ecosystems to global warming will likely be stronger in cold ecosystems where many processes are temperature‐limited. Predicting these effects is difficult because air and soil temperatures will not change in concert, and will affect above and belowground processes differently. We disentangled above and belowground temperature effects on plant C allocation and deposition of plant C in soils by independently manipulating air and soil temperatures in microcosms planted with either Leucanthemopsis alpina or Pinus mugo seedlings. Daily average temperatures of 4 or 9°C were applied to shoots and independently to roots, and plants pulse‐labelled with 14 CO 2 . We traced soil CO 2 and 14 CO 2 evolution for 4?days, after which microcosms were destructively harvested and 14 C quantified in plant and soil fractions. In microcosms with L.?alpina , net 14 C uptake was higher at 9°C than at 4°C soil temperature, and this difference was independent of air temperature. In warmer soils, more C was allocated to roots at greater soil depth, with no effect of air temperature. In P.?mugo microcosms, assimilate partitioning to roots increased with air temperature, but only when soils were at 9°C. Higher soil temperatures also increased the mean soil depth at which 14 C was allocated. Our findings highlight the dependence of C uptake, use, and partitioning on both air and soil temperature, with the latter being relatively more important. The strong temperature‐sensitivity of C assimilate use in the roots and rhizosphere supports the hypothesis that cold limitation on C uptake is primarily mediated by reduced sink strength in the roots. We conclude that variations in soil rather than air temperature are going to drive plant responses to warming in cold environments, with potentially large changes in C cycling due to enhanced transfer of plant‐derived C to soils.
机译:在许多过程受到温度限制的寒冷生态系统中,生态系统对全球变暖的碳循环响应可能会更强。很难预测这些影响,因为空气和土壤的温度不会一致变化,并且会对地上和地下过程产生不同的影响。通过独立地控制种植有白花苜蓿或高山松树幼苗的微观世界中的空气和土壤温度,我们解开了地下温度和地下温度对植物C分配和土壤中C沉积的影响。将日平均温度4或9°C应用于芽,并独立应用于根,并用14 CO 2脉冲标记植物。我们追踪了土壤CO 2和14 CO 2的演变历时4天,之后破坏性地收获了微观世界,并在植物和土壤中定量了14C。在有高山乳杆菌的缩影中,在9°C下的净14 C吸收比在4°C的土壤温度下高,并且这种差异与气温无关。在较热的土壤中,更多的碳分配给土壤深度更大的根,而不受气温的影响。在P.mugo微观世界中,同化物分配到根部的过程随着气温的升高而增加,但仅当土壤温度为9°C时才如此。较高的土壤温度也增加了分配14 C时的平均土壤深度。我们的发现强调了碳的吸收,利用和分配对空气和土壤温度的依赖性,而后者相对更为重要。根和根际对C同化剂的强烈温度敏感性支持以下假说:对C吸收的冷限制主要是由根中降低的下沉强度介导的。我们得出的结论是,土壤而不是气温的变化将推动植物对寒冷环境中变暖的反应,由于植物来源的碳向土壤的转移增加,碳循环可能发生较大变化。

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