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1.
Huan Jing Ke Xue ; 43(10): 4648-4657, 2022 Oct 08.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36224150

ABSTRACT

It is of great significance to clarify the influence of soil temperature and moisture on soil respiration rate and its characteristics in ecologically fragile regions under the background of climate change for the accurate assessment and prediction of carbon budgets in this region. The average CO2 concentration and soil temperature and moisture at different soil depths (10, 50, and 100 cm) were measured using a CO2 analyzer and temperature and moisture sensors. The soil respiration rate was calculated using Fick's first diffusion coefficient method. The dynamic characteristics of soil temperature, soil moisture, and soil respiration rate in different soil depths were explored, and the response of soil respiration rate to soil temperature and moisture were further analyzed. The results showed that the diurnal variation in soil respiration rate decreased significantly with the increase in soil depth (P<0.05), and the peak time lagged behind. Soil respiration rate in adjacent soil depths (10, 50, and 100 cm) lagged 1 h from top to bottom. The monthly variation in soil respiration rate was a multi-peak curve, in which the maximum soil respiration rates of 10, 50, and 100 cm soil depths were on July 25th, August 6th, and August 10th, reaching 13.96, 2.96, and 1.47 µmol·(m2·s)-1, respectively. The effect of soil temperature on soil respiration rate decreased with the increase in soil depth. Soil temperature at 50 cm and below had no significant effect on soil respiration rate (P>0.05). The fitting index of 10 cm soil depth was the best (R2=0.96), but the fitting indexes of 50 cm and 100 cm soil depths were poor (R2=0.00 and R2=0.01, respectively). The temperature sensitivity coefficient Q10 decreased with the increase in soil depth. Soil moisture in different soil depths had significant effects on soil respiration rate (P<0.05), and the quadratic fitting indicated that 50 cm (R2=0.35)>10 cm (R2=0.22)>100 cm (R2=0.31). The combined effects of soil temperature and moisture in different soil depths could explain 96%, 6%-50%, and 22%-24% of soil respiration rate, respectively. In summary, the effects of soil temperature and moisture at different soil depths of the Caragana korshinskii plantation in the loess-hilly region on soil respiration rate differed. The soil respiration rate of the 10 cm soil depth was affected by the comprehensive effect of soil temperature and moisture; however, the relative contribution of soil temperature was higher, and soil moisture at and below a soil depth of 50 cm was the key factor. These results could help improve predictions on the impact of future climate change on the carbon cycle of terrestrial ecosystems in the region and provide a theoretical basis for greenhouse gas regulation in the future.


Subject(s)
Caragana , Greenhouse Gases , Carbon , Carbon Dioxide/analysis , China , Ecosystem , Respiratory Rate , Soil , Temperature
2.
Ying Yong Sheng Tai Xue Bao ; 27(12): 3838-3844, 2016 Dec.
Article in Chinese | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29704341

ABSTRACT

Taking the Quercus liaotungensis middle-aged forests in Huanglong and Qiaoshan Mountains as study objects, the average size of individual trees of Q. liaotungensis, yield and rate of its reproductive modules, as well as their spatial distribution characteristics were investigated in five years after thinning at different intensities (CK, 10%, 20% and 30%), in order to demonstrate the impact of thinning intensity on reproductive modules of Q. liaotungensis. Thinning intensity had no significant effect on average height and average DBH, while it had significant positive correlation with crown area and crown volume. The yield of generative shoots, young fruits and mature fruits increased with thinning intensity, but vegetative shoots, staminate inflorescence, staminate flowers and pistillate flowers of Q. liaotungensis had little change. The yield of generative shoots, young fruits and mature fruits had raised significantly under 20% thinning, and reached the maximum under 30% thinning intensity. The rate of generative shoots and fruit setting rate increased with thinning intensity, and reached significant level under 20% or 30% thinning compared with the control. About three-quarters of the generative shoots, female and male flowers centered in the upper canopy, and the rest were in the lower part. Numbers of reproductive modules at sunny side accounted for about 65% of the total. The lower crown, shaded generative shoots, pistillate flowers and staminate inflorescence increased with the increasing thinning intensity, and the upper crown, sunny generative shoots, pistillate flowers and staminate inflorescence showed a decreasing trend with the increasing thinning intensity. Thinning at the intensity of 30% (canopy density 0.6) was the best, which could greatly improve the fruit set percentage of Q. liaotungensis and its mature rate, so as to improve the seed yield and quality, providing the guarantee for the seed collection and natural regeneration of Q. liaotungensis forests.


Subject(s)
Forests , Quercus/physiology , China , Flowers , Forestry , Fruit , Reproduction , Seeds , Trees/physiology
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