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Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.
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Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Apr 01, 2015

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Page 1: Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem

Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher

4-6th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Page 2: Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Carbon storage

• New Zealand is a signatory to the Kyoto Protocol– Required to create inventory of its

GHG sources and sinks– Reduce GHG emissions to a fixed

amount

• NZ GHG emissions are increasing– Increased fuel use– Increased reliance on coal power

stations– Increase in methane emitters– Reduction in pine plantations

• Effort going into carbon storage in marginal lands, esp. re-afforestation with kanuka)

Page 3: Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

The forest

• Kanuka (Kunzia ericoides, Myrtaceae)

• Short lived (60-100 yrs)• Fast growth habit, light

demanding• Secondary invader, reclaims

old pasture• Exotic grass/herb understory• 7m tall trees, 3 500 ha-1

• First forest on site, 35 yrs old • 49 tC ha-1,equivalent to a net

gain of 1.4 tC ha-1 y-1

Page 4: Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Site Location

• Island in the middle of the braided Rakaia River • Forest occupies 800 m x 2000 m• 50 km SW of Christchurch (43 ºS)• 60 masl• Soils 100 yrs old• NW foehn + katabatic winds

X

Page 5: Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Instrumentation• Solar powered, closed-path, eddy

covariance • Profiling system• Background met.• Soil moisture and temperature• Monthly soil surface respiration and

biomass measurements

Page 6: Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Seasonal understory biomass

Month

Aug Oct Dec Feb Apr Jun Aug

Und

erst

ory

Bio

mas

s (g

m-2

)

0

100

200

300

400

500

Live Dead Total

• Tree leaf biomass was ~ 200 g m-2

• Unimodal change in total understory biomass• Change in live:dead ratio between spring and autumn

Page 7: Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Seasonal ecosystem respiration

Soil temperature (C)

4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20

Spring

< 0.15Autumn

Oct Dec Feb Apr Jun Aug

Month

Eco

syst

em r

esp

irat

ion

( m

ol C

O2

m-2

s-1

)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7(a) (b)

• Summer drought reduced ecosystem respiration by up to 7-fold• Spring and autumn respiration have similar response to temperature

Page 8: Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Ecosystem respiration under well watered conditions

Spring

Soil temperature (0C)

6 8 10 12 14 16

Eco

syst

em R

esp

iratio

n (

mol

C

O2

m -2

s-1)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

R10 = 3.12

r2 = 0.64***

R10 = 2.76

r2 = 0.38Autumn

Soil temperature (0C)

6 8 10 12 14 16 18

R10 = 2.75

r2 = 0.38***

• At same temperature, autumn respiration 13% lower then in spring• Suggests change in carbon substrate supply or quality

Page 9: Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Response of ecosystem respiration to changes in soil VWC

Root-zone water content (m3

m-3

)

0.05 0.10 0.15 0.20 0.25 0.30

Ec

osy

ste

m R

10

( m

ol C

O2

m-2

s-1)

0

1

2

3

4

5

• Fit R10 to all data to remove temperature effect• If VWC < 12% then linear response of R10 to increasing soil moisture

Page 10: Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Comparison between soil surface and ecosystem respiration

Re

sp

ira

tio

n r

ate

( m

ol C

O2

m-2

s-1

)

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

Rs SoilRe Ecosystem Col 1 vs Soil Flux Col 1 vs Soil Flux

Month

Rs

/ Re

(%)

40

50

60

70

80

90

Sep Nov Jan Mar May Jul

• Soil and ecosystem respiration bimodal • Ratio of Rs/Re remained stable until rewetting in April• After rewetting 3-fold increase in Rs

• Sustained increase in Rs for 2 months

Page 11: Seasonal Changes of Soil and Ecosystem Respiration in a Young Forest J Hunt, T McSeveny and F Kelliher 4-6 th Feb 2008, Weintal Resort, Tanunda, Australia.

Conclusions

• Response of ecosystem respiration to temperature greater in spring than autumn

• Due to increased substrate availability with active growth and greater biomass

• When VWC > 12%, temperature and substrate availability were main drivers of ecosystem respiration

• Rs/Re varied from 50-90%, not caused by differences in soil-canopy temperatures

• Dynamic forest understorey can influence magnitude and seasonal maxima of ecosystem respiration