Shrubland primary production and soil respiration diverge along European climate gradient

Open Access
Authors
  • S. Reinsch
  • E. Koller
  • A. Sowerby
  • G. de Dato
  • M. Estiarte
  • G. Guidolotti
  • E. Kovács-Láng
  • G. Kröel-Dulay
  • E. Lellei-Kovács
  • K.S. Larsen
  • D. Liberati
  • J. Peñuelas
  • J. Ransijn
  • D.A. Robinson
  • I.K. Schmidt
  • A.R. Smith
  • A. Tietema
  • J.S. Dukes
  • C. Beier
  • B.A. Emmett
Publication date 03-03-2017
Journal Scientific Reports
Article number 43952
Volume | Issue number 7
Number of pages 7
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract
Above- and belowground carbon (C) stores of terrestrial ecosystems are vulnerable to environmental change. Ecosystem C balances in response to environmental changes have been quantified at individual sites, but the magnitudes and directions of these responses along environmental gradients remain uncertain. Here we show the responses of ecosystem C to 8–12 years of experimental drought and night-time warming across an aridity gradient spanning seven European shrublands using indices of C assimilation (aboveground net primary production: aNPP) and soil C efflux (soil respiration: Rs). The changes of aNPP and Rs in response to drought indicated that wet systems had an overall risk of increased loss of C but drier systems did not. Warming had no consistent effect on aNPP across the climate gradient, but suppressed Rs more at the drier sites. Our findings suggest that above- and belowground C fluxes can decouple, and provide no evidence of acclimation to environmental change at a decadal timescale. aNPP and Rs especially differed in their sensitivity to drought and warming, with belowground processes being more sensitive to environmental change.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary file
Language English
Related dataset Aboveground plant biomass and soil respiration for seven European shrublands under drought and warming manipulations (1998-2012)
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/srep43952
Downloads
Shrubland (Final published version)
Shrubland supplement (Other version)
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