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Precipitation pulses enhance respiration of Mediterranean ecosystems: the balance between organic and inorganic components of increased soil CO2 efflux (Articolo in rivista)
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- Precipitation pulses enhance respiration of Mediterranean ecosystems: the balance between organic and inorganic components of increased soil CO2 efflux (Articolo in rivista) (literal)
- Anno
- 2009-01-01T00:00:00+01:00 (literal)
- Http://www.cnr.it/ontology/cnr/pubblicazioni.owl#doi
- 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2008.01793.x (literal)
- Alternative label
Inglima I., Alberti G., Bertolini T., Vaccari FP., Miglietta F., Cotrufo MF, Peressotti A. (2009)
Precipitation pulses enhance respiration of Mediterranean ecosystems: the balance between organic and inorganic components of increased soil CO2 efflux
in Global change biology (Print)
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- Inglima I., Alberti G., Bertolini T., Vaccari FP., Miglietta F., Cotrufo MF, Peressotti A. (literal)
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- Http://www.cnr.it/ontology/cnr/pubblicazioni.owl#affiliazioni
- Titolo
- Precipitation pulses enhance respiration of Mediterranean ecosystems: the balance between organic and inorganic components of increased soil CO2 efflux (literal)
- Abstract
- In regions characterized by arid seasons, such as the Mediterranean basin, soil moisture
is a major driver of ecosystem CO2 efflux during periods of drought stress. Here, a rain
event can induce a disproportional respiratory pulse, releasing an amount of CO2 to the
atmosphere that may significantly contribute to the annual ecosystem carbon balance.
The mechanisms behind this pulse are unclear, and it is still unknown whether it is due
to the stimulation of autotrophic, heterotrophic and/or inorganic CO2 fluxes. On the
Mediterranean island of Pianosa, eddy flux measurements showed respiratory pulses
after rain events following prolonged drought periods, which occurred in the summer of
2003 and 2006. To investigate the mechanisms of this observed enhanced respiration
fluxes and partition of the soil CO2 sources, two water manipulation experiments were
performed. The first was designed to estimate the effect of soil rewetting on soil CO2
efflux, in the different ecosystem types existing on the island (i.e. woodland, ex-
agricultural and Mediterranean shrubland). The second was a soil CO2 partitioning
experiment to investigate the relative contribution of inorganic and organic CO2 sources
to soil respiration, under dry and wet soil conditions. Our results suggest that the pulse
in the CO2 efflux is primarily due to the enhancement of heterotrophic respiration, likely
caused by the degradation of easily decomposable substrates, accumulated in soils
during the dry period. In fact, the vegetation at the site was senescent and did not play
any significant role in CO2 exchange, as suggested by the absence of diurnal CO2 uptake
in eddy covariance measurements. In addition, soil rewetting did not significantly
enhance inorganic CO2 efflux. (literal)
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