Abstract

Abstract. In this paper, we investigate similarities of effects of soil environmental drivers on year-round daily soil fluxes of nitrous oxide and methane for three distinct semi-natural or natural ecosystems: temperate spruce forest, Germany; tropical rain forest, Queensland, Australia; and ungrazed semi-arid steppe, Inner Mongolia, China. Annual cumulative fluxes of nitrous oxide and methane varied markedly among ecosystems, with nitrous oxide fluxes being highest for the tropical forest site (tropical forest: 0.96 kg N ha−1 yr−1; temperate forest: 0.67 kg N ha−1 yr−1; steppe: 0.22 kg N ha−1 yr−1), while rates of soil methane uptake were approximately equal for the temperate forest (−3.45 kg C ha−1 yr−1) and the steppe (−3.39 kg C ha−1 yr−1), but lower for the tropical forest site (−2.38 kg C ha−1 yr−1). In order to allow for cross-site comparison of effects of changes in soil moisture and soil temperature on fluxes of methane and nitrous oxide, we used a normalization approach. Data analysis with normalized data revealed that, across sites, optimum rates of methane uptake are found at environmental conditions representing approximately average site environmental conditions. This might have rather important implications for understanding effects of climate change on soil methane uptake potential, since any shift in environmental conditions is likely to result in a reduction of soil methane uptake ability. For nitrous oxide, our analysis revealed expected patterns: highest nitrous oxide emissions under moist and warm conditions and large nitrous oxide fluxes if soils are exposed to freeze–thawing effects at sufficiently high soil moisture contents. However, the explanatory power of relationships of soil moisture or soil temperature to nitrous oxide fluxes remained rather poor (R2 ≤ 0.36). When combined effects of changes in soil moisture and soil temperature were considered, the explanatory power of our empirical relationships with regard to temporal variations in nitrous oxide fluxes were at maximum about 50%. This indicates that other controlling factors such as N and C availability or microbial community dynamics might exert a significant control on the temporal dynamic of nitrous oxide fluxes. Though underlying microbial processes such as nitrification and denitrification are sensitive to changes in the environmental regulating factors, important regulating factors like moisture and temperature seem to have both synergistic and antagonistic effects on the status of other regulating factors. Thus we cannot expect a simple relationship between them and the pattern in the rate of emissions, associated with denitrification or nitrification in the soils. In conclusion, we hypothesize that our approach of data generalization may prove beneficial for the development of environmental response models, which can be used across sites, and which are needed to help achieve a better understanding of climate change feedbacks on biospheric sinks or sources of nitrous oxide and methane.

Highlights

  • The CryosphereNitrous oxide and methane are two of the most important radiative trace gases in the atmosphere

  • Variability of soil moisture was significantly higher at the tropical forest site, but lowest for the temperate spruce forest site at Hoglwald Forest (Figs. 1–4)

  • Nitrous oxide fluxes at the tropical forest site were obviously linked to changes in soil moisture and were between 5 and 10 μ N m−2 h−1 during the dry season from May 2002 to November 2002 (Fig. 3)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Nitrous oxide and methane are two of the most important radiative trace gases in the atmosphere. Luo et al.: Effects of soil temperature and moisture on methane uptake and nitrous oxide emissions tems, such as grasslands and forests, are major global sources and sinks/sources of nitrous oxide and methane and play an important role in regulating atmospheric concentration of these gases. Soil–atmosphere exchange of methane and nitrous oxide varies considerably across different terrestrial ecosystem types such as steppe, temperate, and tropical forests Differences in plant and soil microbial communities, soil chemistry and physics, management, soil acidification, and atmospheric nitrogen deposition are drivers for site variation in methane and nitrous oxide fluxes. Seasonal variability of fluxes is likely to be controlled by soil temperature and moisture and their effects on substrate availability, soil aeration, gas diffusivity, and on microbial processes such as mineralization, nitrification, denitrification, methane oxidation, and methanogenesis

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call