Individual and interactive effects of warming and nitrogen supply on CO2 fluxes and carbon allocation in subarctic grassland

Author:

Meeran Kathiravan1ORCID,Verbrigghe Niel2ORCID,Ingrisch Johannes1ORCID,Fuchslueger Lucia23ORCID,Müller Lena1ORCID,Sigurðsson Páll4ORCID,Sigurdsson Bjarni D.4ORCID,Wachter Herbert1ORCID,Watzka Margarete3ORCID,Soong Jennifer L.25ORCID,Vicca Sara2ORCID,Janssens Ivan A.2ORCID,Bahn Michael1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology University of Innsbruck Innsbruck Austria

2. Research Group Plants and Ecosystems University of Antwerp Antwerp Belgium

3. Centre for Microbiology and Environmental Systems Science University of Vienna Vienna Austria

4. Agricultural University of Iceland Borgarnes Iceland

5. Soil and Crop Sciences Department Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado USA

Abstract

AbstractClimate warming has been suggested to impact high latitude grasslands severely, potentially causing considerable carbon (C) losses from soil. Warming can also stimulate nitrogen (N) turnover, but it is largely unclear whether and how altered N availability impacts belowground C dynamics. Even less is known about the individual and interactive effects of warming and N availability on the fate of recently photosynthesized C in soil. On a 10‐year geothermal warming gradient in Iceland, we studied the effects of soil warming and N addition on CO2 fluxes and the fate of recently photosynthesized C through CO2 flux measurements and a 13CO2 pulse‐labeling experiment. Under warming, ecosystem respiration exceeded maximum gross primary productivity, causing increased net CO2 emissions. N addition treatments revealed that, surprisingly, the plants in the warmed soil were N limited, which constrained primary productivity and decreased recently assimilated C in shoots and roots. In soil, microbes were increasingly C limited under warming and increased microbial uptake of recent C. Soil respiration was increased by warming and was fueled by increased belowground inputs and turnover of recently photosynthesized C. Our findings suggest that a decade of warming seemed to have induced a N limitation in plants and a C limitation by soil microbes. This caused a decrease in net ecosystem CO2 uptake and accelerated the respiratory release of photosynthesized C, which decreased the C sequestration potential of the grassland. Our study highlights the importance of belowground C allocation and C‐N interactions in the C dynamics of subarctic ecosystems in a warmer world.

Funder

Austrian Science Fund

Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Universität Innsbruck

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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