Net soil carbon balance in afforested peatlands and separating autotrophic and heterotrophic soil CO<sub>2</sub> effluxes
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Published:2022-01-19
Issue:2
Volume:19
Page:313-327
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Hermans Renée, McKenzie Rebecca, Andersen RoxaneORCID, Teh Yit ArnORCID, Cowie Neil, Subke Jens-Arne
Abstract
Abstract. Peatlands are a significant global carbon (C) store, which can be
compromised by drainage and afforestation. Quantifying the rate of C loss
from peat soils under forestry is challenging, as soil CO2 efflux
includes both CO2 produced from heterotrophic peat decomposition and
CO2 produced by tree roots and associated fungal networks (autotrophic
respiration). We experimentally terminated autotrophic below-ground
respiration in replicated forest plots by cutting through all living tree
roots (trenching) and measured soil surface CO2 flux, litter
input, litter decay rate, and soil temperature and moisture over 2 years.
Decomposition of cut roots was measured and CO2 fluxes were corrected
for this, which resulted in a large change in the fraction heterotrophic : autotrophic flux, suggesting that even 2 years after trenching decaying
root biomass makes significant contributions to the CO2 flux. Annual
peat decomposition (heterotrophic CO2 flux) was 115 ± 16 g C m−2 yr−1, representing ca. 40 % of total soil respiration.
Decomposition of needle litter is accelerated in the presence of an active
rhizosphere, indicating a priming effect by labile C inputs from roots. This
suggests that our estimates of peat mineralization in our trenched plots are
conservative and underestimate overall rates of peat C loss. Considering
also input of litter from trees, our results indicate that the soils in
these 30-year-old drained and afforested peatlands are a net sink for C,
since substantially more C enters the soil organic matter than is
decomposed heterotrophically. This study does not account for fluvial C
fluxes, which represent a small flux compared to the CO2 soil efflux;
further, root litter and exudate deposition could be a significant C source
that is only partially sampled by our approach, adding to these plantations
being a potential carbon sink. However, the C balance for these soils should
be taken over the lifespan of the trees, in order to determine if the soils
under these drained and afforested peatlands are a sustained sink of C or
become a net source over longer periods of forestry.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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