Loading…

Effect of warming on the temperature dependence of soil respiration rate in arctic, temperate and tropical soils

We examined the response of the temperature coefficient ( Q 10) for soil respiration rate to changes in environmental temperature through a laboratory incubation experiment. Soil samples were collected from three climatic areas: arctic (Svalbard, Norway), temperate (Tsukuba, Japan) and tropical (Pas...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied soil ecology : a section of Agriculture, ecosystems & environment ecosystems & environment, 2003-03, Vol.22 (3), p.205-210
Main Authors: Bekku, Yukiko Sakata, Nakatsubo, Takayuki, Kume, Atsushi, Adachi, Minako, Koizumi, Hiroshi
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:We examined the response of the temperature coefficient ( Q 10) for soil respiration rate to changes in environmental temperature through a laboratory incubation experiment. Soil samples were collected from three climatic areas: arctic (Svalbard, Norway), temperate (Tsukuba, Japan) and tropical (Pasoh, Malaysia). The arctic and temperate soils were incubated at 8 °C (control), 12 °C (4 °C warming) and 16 °C (8 °C warming) for 17 days. The tropical soil was incubated at 16 °C (8 °C cooling), 24 °C (control) and 32 °C (8 °C warming). Before and after the incubation experiment, the temperature dependence of soil microbial respiration was measured using an open-airflow method with IRGA by changing the temperature in a water bath. The initial Q 10 before the incubation experiment was larger in the soils from higher latitudes: 3.4 in the arctic soil, 2.9 in the temperate soil, and 2.1 in the tropical soil. The response of the microbial respiration rate to change in temperature differed among the three soil types. The temperature dependence of respiration rate in the arctic soil did not change in response to warming by 4 and 8 °C with a Q 10 of about 3. On the other hand, the Q 10 in the temperate soil decreased with increasing incubation temperature: from 2.8 in soils incubated at 8 °C to 2.5 at 12 °C and 2.0 at 16 °C. In the tropical soil, the Q 10 was not changed even by the 8 °C warming with a value of 2.1, whereas the Q 10 was increased from 2.1 to 2.7 by the 8 °C cooling. These results suggest that the response of microbial respiration to climatic warming may differ between soils from different latitudes.
ISSN:0929-1393
1873-0272
DOI:10.1016/S0929-1393(02)00158-0