Abstract

AbstractThe forest canopy cover can directly and indirectly affect soil conditions and hence soil carbon emission through soil respiration. Little is known, however, on the effects of canopy cover on soil respiration under the canopy of different tree species and soil water conditions. We have examined the variation in soil respiration at different soil water conditions (dry <10 %, wet >20 %, v/v) under different tree canopy covers in comparison with the canopy interspace in a temperate coniferous (Pinus armandii Franch) and broadleaved (Quercus aliena var. acuteserrata) mixed forest in central China. The results show that soil respiration measured under tree canopy cover varied with canopy size and soil water content. Soil respiration under small‐sized canopies of P. armandii (PS) was higher than that under large‐sized (PL) canopies, but the difference was only significant under the dry soil condition. However, soil respiration under large‐sized canopies of Q. aliena (QL) was significantly greater than that under small‐sized (QS) canopies under both dry and wet soil conditions. The difference in soil respiration between differently sized canopies of Q. aliena (33.5–35.8 %) was significantly greater than that between differently sized canopies of P. armandii (2.4–8.1 %). Differences in soil respiration between inter‐plant gaps and under QS canopies in both the dry and wet soil conditions were significant. Significant increases in soil respiration (9.7–32.2 %) during the transition from dry to wet conditions were found regardless of canopy size, but the increase of soil respiration was significantly lower under P. armandii canopies (9.7–17.7 %) than under Q. aliena canopies (25.9–31.5 %). Our findings that the canopy cover of different tree species influences soil respiration under different soil moisture conditions could provide useful information for parameterizing and/or calibrating carbon flux models, especially for spatially explicit carbon models.

Highlights

  • The forest canopy cover can directly and indirectly affect soil conditions and soil carbon emission through soil respiration

  • We have examined the variation in soil respiration at different soil water conditions under different tree canopy covers in comparison with the canopy interspace in a temperate coniferous (Pinus armandii Franch) and broadleaved (Quercus aliena var. acuteserrata) mixed forest in central China

  • Field data were first tested for normality and homogeneity of variance, data from different canopy size classes were tested by one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) with least significant difference (LSD) multiple comparison test per tree species under different soil moisture conditions

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Summary

Introduction

The forest canopy cover can directly and indirectly affect soil conditions and soil carbon emission through soil respiration. Soil respiration under small-sized canopies of P. armandii (PS) was higher than that under large-sized (PL) canopies, but the difference was only significant under the dry soil condition. Soil respiration under large-sized canopies of Q. aliena (QL) was significantly greater than that under small-sized (QS) canopies under both dry and wet soil conditions. There is a large variation in soil respiration due to changing environmental conditions (i.e., temperature, moisture) (Tang and Baldocchi 2005), and this leads to a poor understanding and inaccurate estimates of soil carbon fluxes in many forest ecosystems. There is a need to study the effects of canopy cover of different tree species on soil respiration and to understand to what extent these effects are the result of soil temperature and soil water content as influenced by canopy cover

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