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Variation in Soil Respiration across Soil and Vegetation Types in an Alpine Valley.


ABSTRACT:

Background and aims

Soils of mountain regions and their associated plant communities are highly diverse over short spatial scales due to the heterogeneity of geological substrates and highly dynamic geomorphic processes. The consequences of this heterogeneity for biogeochemical transfers, however, remain poorly documented. The objective of this study was to quantify the variability of soil-surface carbon dioxide efflux, known as soil respiration (Rs), across soil and vegetation types in an Alpine valley. To this aim, we measured Rs rates during the peak and late growing season (July-October) in 48 plots located in pastoral areas of a small valley of the Swiss Alps.

Findings

Four herbaceous vegetation types were identified, three corresponding to different stages of primary succession (Petasition paradoxi in pioneer conditions, Seslerion in more advanced stages and Poion alpinae replacing the climactic forests), as well as one (Rumicion alpinae) corresponding to eutrophic grasslands in intensively grazed areas. Soils were developed on calcareous alluvial and colluvial fan deposits and were classified into six types including three Fluvisols grades and three Cambisols grades. Plant and soil types had a high level of co-occurrence. The strongest predictor of Rs was soil temperature, yet we detected additional explanatory power of sampling month, showing that temporal variation was not entirely reducible to variations in temperature. Vegetation and soil types were also major determinants of Rs. During the warmest month (August), Rs rates varied by over a factor three between soil and vegetation types, ranging from 2.5 ?mol m-2 s-1 in pioneer environments (Petasition on Very Young Fluvisols) to 8.5 ?mol m-2 s-1 in differentiated soils supporting nitrophilous species (Rumicion on Calcaric Cambisols).

Conclusions

Overall, this study provides quantitative estimates of spatial and temporal variability in Rs in the mountain environment, and demonstrates that estimations of soil carbon efflux at the watershed scale in complex geomorphic terrain have to account for soil and vegetation heterogeneity.

SUBMITTER: Grand S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5042455 | biostudies-literature | 2016

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Variation in Soil Respiration across Soil and Vegetation Types in an Alpine Valley.

Grand Stephanie S   Rubin Aurélie A   Verrecchia Eric P EP   Vittoz Pascal P  

PloS one 20160929 9


<h4>Background and aims</h4>Soils of mountain regions and their associated plant communities are highly diverse over short spatial scales due to the heterogeneity of geological substrates and highly dynamic geomorphic processes. The consequences of this heterogeneity for biogeochemical transfers, however, remain poorly documented. The objective of this study was to quantify the variability of soil-surface carbon dioxide efflux, known as soil respiration (Rs), across soil and vegetation types in  ...[more]

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