Abstract

Soil respiration is an important component of the carbon cycle and is also recognized as one of the primary pathways that release CO2 from the soil into the atmosphere in terrestrial ecosystems. Soil CO2 flux resulting from soil microbial activity and root respiration is one of the major components of the total carbon flux in agro-ecosystems. However, the impact of agronomic practices such as mulching on soil respiration in greenhouses has been less thoroughly studied. Consequently, field experiments were conducted during the growing seasons of 2011 and 2012 in greenhouse to evaluate soil respiration and the biotic and abiotic factors that influence it in hot pepper cultivation under four types of mulch practices (without mulch, wheat straw mulch, plastic film mulch, and combined mulch with plastic film and wheat straw). Soil water content had an overriding influence on soil respiration in hot pepper culture during the growing season under mulching treatments in a greenhouse, whereas the influence of soil temperature was relatively less. Additionally, the study showed that root biomass and root vigor should also be incorporated as predictor variables for soil respiration under mulching in greenhouses.

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