Abstract
As the climate warms, winters with less snow and therefore more soil freeze‐thaw cycles are likely to become more frequent in oceanic mountain areas. It is a concern that this might impair the soil's ability to store carbon and nutrients, and lead to increased leaching losses of dissolved C and nutrients and subsequent changes in nutrient cycling and ecosystem productivity.Through a combination of laboratory and field experiments, we studied short‐term effects of changing winter conditions on carbon and nutrient leaching from two plant‐soil systems with contrasting snow conditions (shallow/intermittent vs. deep/persistent snow). In the laboratory we exposed cores (soil and vegetation) from sites with either intermittent or persistent winter snow cover to five different freeze‐thaw scenarios of realistic frequency and duration. Additionally, we set up a transplant experiment at our field site by reciprocally transplanting soil‐plant monoliths between sites with intermittent and persistent snow. Together, the field and laboratory experiments aimed to assess how carbon and nutrient leaching was affected by both historical snow conditions and short‐term (through freeze‐thaw scenarios and transplantation) changes in snow cover and thermal conditions.Both a greater number of freeze‐thaw cycles and longer duration of sub‐zero temperatures increased carbon and nutrient leaching from incubated soil cores. Cores from sites with persistent snow generally had lower nutrient losses under control conditions, but greater losses following induced freeze‐thaw cycles than cores from intermittent snow sites. The character of the leached dissolved organic carbon (DOC) suggested fresh organic material, such as live plant roots or microbes, as the source of carbon and nutrients. Nutrient losses from the plant‐soil systems in the field were greater at sites with persistent winter snow due to greater volumes of percolating water in spring. This suggests that increasingly severe and frequent soil freeze‐thaw events in oceanic mountain ecosystems can enhance the mobilization of C, N and P in labile forms but, in the absence of water fluxes, these nutrients would remain available for in‐situ cycling. Thus, under future warmer winter conditions, increased carbon and nutrient losses from oceanic mountain ecosystems could occur if winters with little snow coincide with wet spring conditions.
Highlights
Increasing winter temperatures and decreased snowfall have been recorded in many mountain regions of the world (IPCC 2013)
During and after the warm spells, soil temperatures in plots away from the fence closely followed the course of the air temperature (Fig. 2a, b), suggesting that snow cover was lacking for extended periods during winter
Through a combination of laboratory and field experiments, we demonstrated that over-winter freeze-thaw cycles occur under shallow and intermittent snow cover at an oceanic temperate mountain site, and that these have the potential to enhance the mobilization of C, N and P into labile form
Summary
Increasing winter temperatures and decreased snowfall have been recorded in many mountain regions of the world (IPCC 2013). In many continental mountain ranges with cold winter climate, under projected winter warming most of the precipitation will continue to fall as snow (Knowles et al 2006, Serquet et al 2013). In oceanic and temperate mountain ranges (Type C of the Koppen-Geiger climate zones; Kottek et al 2006) thinner and intermittent snow cover is predicted, attributed to more frequent warming spells and an increasing proportion of winter precipitation falling as rain (Brown and Mote 2009, McCabe and Wolock 2010). In oceanic and low temperate mountain ranges, rising winter temperatures are expected to lead to harsher and more variable winter conditions for the plant-soil system
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