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Soil warming, carbon-nitrogen interactions, and forest carbon budgets.


ABSTRACT: Soil warming has the potential to alter both soil and plant processes that affect carbon storage in forest ecosystems. We have quantified these effects in a large, long-term (7-y) soil-warming study in a deciduous forest in New England. Soil warming has resulted in carbon losses from the soil and stimulated carbon gains in the woody tissue of trees. The warming-enhanced decay of soil organic matter also released enough additional inorganic nitrogen into the soil solution to support the observed increases in plant carbon storage. Although soil warming has resulted in a cumulative net loss of carbon from a New England forest relative to a control area over the 7-y study, the annual net losses generally decreased over time as plant carbon storage increased. In the seventh year, warming-induced soil carbon losses were almost totally compensated for by plant carbon gains in response to warming. We attribute the plant gains primarily to warming-induced increases in nitrogen availability. This study underscores the importance of incorporating carbon-nitrogen interactions in atmosphere-ocean-land earth system models to accurately simulate land feedbacks to the climate system.

SUBMITTER: Melillo JM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3111267 | biostudies-other | 2011 Jun

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Soil warming, carbon-nitrogen interactions, and forest carbon budgets.

Melillo Jerry M JM   Butler Sarah S   Johnson Jennifer J   Mohan Jacqueline J   Steudler Paul P   Lux Heidi H   Burrows Elizabeth E   Bowles Francis F   Smith Rose R   Scott Lindsay L   Vario Chelsea C   Hill Troy T   Burton Andrew A   Zhou Yu-Mei YM   Tang Jim J  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20110523 23


Soil warming has the potential to alter both soil and plant processes that affect carbon storage in forest ecosystems. We have quantified these effects in a large, long-term (7-y) soil-warming study in a deciduous forest in New England. Soil warming has resulted in carbon losses from the soil and stimulated carbon gains in the woody tissue of trees. The warming-enhanced decay of soil organic matter also released enough additional inorganic nitrogen into the soil solution to support the observed  ...[more]

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