Abstract

A mobile laboratory was developed to administer a controlled flow of (13)C labelled CO(2) at ambient concentrations ( approximately 350 ppm) in the field. The stable isotope delivery (SID) system consists of an isotope-mixing unit with flow control to a series of 12 independent labelling chambers. In-line CPU controlled infrared gas analysers allow automated measurement of chamber CO(2) concentrations and gas flow management. A preliminary experiment was established on an upland pasture located at the NERC Soil Biodiversity experimental site, Sourhope, UK, in August 1999. The objective of this investigation was to determine the magnitude of pulse-derived C incorporation into a typical upland plant community. To achieve this, the SID system was deployed to pulse-label vegetation with CO(2) enriched with (13)C (50 atom %) at ambient concentrations ( approximately 350 ppm) on two consecutive days in August 1999. Samples of headspace CO(2), shoot and root were taken on four occasions over a period of 28 days after (13)C labelling. These materials were then prepared for (13)C/(12)C ratio determination by continuous-flow/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry (CF-C-IRMS). Results showed that pulse derived CO(2)-C was assimilated at a rate of 128 +/- 32 microg g shoot-C hour(-1). Dynamic samplings showed that pulse-derived (13)C concentrations in the labelled plant tissues declined by 77.4 +/- 6% after 48 hours. The rapid decline in (13)C concentrations in plant matter was the result of C loss from the plant in the form of respired CO(2) and root exudates, and dilution by subsequent unlabelled C assimilates. This novel system offers considerable potential for in situ tracer investigations.

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