Abstract

The allocation of net primary production (NPP) between above- and belowground components is a key step of ecosystem material cycling and energy flows, which determines many critical parameters, e.g., the fraction of below ground NPP (BNPP) to NPP (fBNPP) and root turnover rates (RTR), in vegetation models. However, direct NPP estimation and partition are scarcely based on field measurements of biomass dynamics in the alpine grasslands on the Northern Tibetan Plateau (NTP). Consequently, these parameters are unverifiable and controversial. Here, we measured above- and belowground biomass dynamics (monthly from May to September each year from 2013 to 2015) to estimate NPP dynamics and allocations in four typical alpine grassland ecosystems, i.e., an alpine meadow, alpine meadow steppe, alpine steppe and alpine desert steppe. We found that NPP and its components, above and below ground NPP (ANPP and BNPP), increased significantly from west to east on the NTP, and ANPP was mainly affected by temperature while BNPP and NPP were mainly affected by precipitation. The bulk of BNPP was generally concentrated in the top 10 cm soil layers in all four alpine grasslands (76.1% ± 9.1%, mean ± SD). Our results showed that fBNPP was significantly different among these four alpine grasslands, with its means in alpine meadow (0.93), alpine desert steppe (0.92) being larger than that in the alpine meadow steppe (0.76) and alpine steppe (0.77). Both temperature and precipitation had significant and positive effects on the fBNPP, while their interaction effects were significantly opposite. RTR decreased with increasing precipitation, but increased with increasing temperature across this ecoregion. Our study illustrated that alpine grasslands on the NTP, especially in the alpine meadow and alpine desert steppe, partitioned an unexpected and greater NPP to below ground than most historical reports across global grasslands, indicating a more critical role of the root carbon pool in carbon cycling in alpine grasslands on the NTP.

Highlights

  • Introductionnet primary production (NPP) partitioning of above and below ground components plays a critical role in carbon cycling of terrestrial ecosystems [3,4,5,6]

  • Net primary productivity (NPP) is a key component of global carbon cycling [1,2]

  • In monthly field measurement data of four alpine grasslands, we estimated the net primary production (NPP) dynamics and its this study, using the monthly field measurement data of four alpine grasslands, we estimated the components (ANPP and below ground NPP (BNPP)), which are critical for an accurate evaluation of carbon dynamics and NPP dynamics and its components (ANPP and BNPP), which are critical for an accurate evaluation allocation on the Northern Tibetan Plateau (NTP)

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Summary

Introduction

NPP partitioning of above and below ground components plays a critical role in carbon cycling of terrestrial ecosystems [3,4,5,6]. Calibration of many ecological process models is based on field biomass sampling [1,15,16]. The temporal dynamics of NPP are full of challenges to estimate compared with the robustness of large-scale vegetation productivity patterns by one-off sampling results [19]. Few reliable estimates for NPP dynamics are available, especially, because of the difficulty in measuring the below ground component of NPP in terrestrial ecosystems [16], the carbon in alpine grasslands is stored primarily in the below-ground [20]. Few related studies focused on below ground NPP (BNPP)

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