Massive warming-induced carbon loss from subalpine grassland soils in an altitudinal transplantation experiment

6Citations
Citations of this article
19Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Climate change is associated with a change in soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks, implying a feedback mechanism on global warming. Grassland soils represent 28% of the global soil C sink and are therefore important for the atmospheric greenhouse gas concentration. In a field experiment in the Swiss Alps we recorded changes in the ecosystem organic carbon stock under climate change conditions, while quantifying the ecosystem C fluxes at the same time (ecosystem respiration, gross primary productivity, C export in plant material and leachate water). We exposed 216 grassland monoliths to six different climate scenarios (CSs) in an altitudinal transplantation experiment. In addition, we applied an irrigation treatment (+12% to 21% annual precipitation) and an N deposition treatment (+3 and +15kgNha-1yr-1) in a factorial design, simulating summer-drought mitigation and atmospheric N pollution. In 5 years the ecosystem C stock, consisting of plant C and SOC, dropped dramatically by about-14% (-1034±610gCm-2) with the CS treatment representing a +3.0°C seasonal (April-October) warming. N deposition and the irrigation treatment caused no significant effects. Measurements of C fluxes revealed that ecosystem respiration increased by 10% at the +1.5°C warmer CS site and by 38% at the +3°C warmer CS site (P≤0.001 each), compared to the CS reference site with no warming. However, gross primary productivity was unaffected by warming, as were the amounts of exported C in harvested plant material and leachate water (dissolved organic C). As a result, the 5-year C flux balance resulted in a climate scenario effect of-936±138gCm-2 at the +3.0°C CS, similar to the C stock climate scenario effect. It is likely that this dramatic C loss of the grassland is a transient effect before a new, climate-adjusted steady state is reached.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Volk, M., Suter, M., Wahl, A. L., & Bassin, S. (2022). Massive warming-induced carbon loss from subalpine grassland soils in an altitudinal transplantation experiment. Biogeosciences, 19(11), 2921–2937. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-19-2921-2022

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free