Sensitivity of soil respiration to variability in soil moisture and temperature in a humid tropical forest.

Precipitation and temperature are important drivers of soil respiration. The role of moisture and temperature are generally explored at seasonal or inter-annual timescales; however, significant variability also occurs on hourly to daily time-scales. We used small (1.54 m(2)), throughfall exclusion s...

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Main Authors: Tana E Wood, Matteo Detto, Whendee L Silver
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3846571?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-4bbdd7c2142e4dd9a0edf84b904c36542020-11-25T01:34:56ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01812e8096510.1371/journal.pone.0080965Sensitivity of soil respiration to variability in soil moisture and temperature in a humid tropical forest.Tana E WoodMatteo DettoWhendee L SilverPrecipitation and temperature are important drivers of soil respiration. The role of moisture and temperature are generally explored at seasonal or inter-annual timescales; however, significant variability also occurs on hourly to daily time-scales. We used small (1.54 m(2)), throughfall exclusion shelters to evaluate the role soil moisture and temperature as temporal controls on soil CO2 efflux from a humid tropical forest in Puerto Rico. We measured hourly soil CO2 efflux, temperature and moisture in control and exclusion plots (n = 6) for 6-months. The variance of each time series was analyzed using orthonormal wavelet transformation and Haar-wavelet coherence. We found strong negative coherence between soil moisture and soil respiration in control plots corresponding to a two-day periodicity. Across all plots, there was a significant parabolic relationship between soil moisture and soil CO2 efflux with peak soil respiration occurring at volumetric soil moisture of approximately 0.375 m(3)/m(3). We additionally found a weak positive coherence between CO2 and temperature at longer time-scales and a significant positive relationship between soil temperature and CO2 efflux when the analysis was limited to the control plots. The coherence between CO2 and both temperature and soil moisture were reduced in exclusion plots. The reduced CO2 response to temperature in exclusion plots suggests that the positive effect of temperature on CO2 is constrained by soil moisture availability.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3846571?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tana E Wood
Matteo Detto
Whendee L Silver
spellingShingle Tana E Wood
Matteo Detto
Whendee L Silver
Sensitivity of soil respiration to variability in soil moisture and temperature in a humid tropical forest.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Tana E Wood
Matteo Detto
Whendee L Silver
author_sort Tana E Wood
title Sensitivity of soil respiration to variability in soil moisture and temperature in a humid tropical forest.
title_short Sensitivity of soil respiration to variability in soil moisture and temperature in a humid tropical forest.
title_full Sensitivity of soil respiration to variability in soil moisture and temperature in a humid tropical forest.
title_fullStr Sensitivity of soil respiration to variability in soil moisture and temperature in a humid tropical forest.
title_full_unstemmed Sensitivity of soil respiration to variability in soil moisture and temperature in a humid tropical forest.
title_sort sensitivity of soil respiration to variability in soil moisture and temperature in a humid tropical forest.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Precipitation and temperature are important drivers of soil respiration. The role of moisture and temperature are generally explored at seasonal or inter-annual timescales; however, significant variability also occurs on hourly to daily time-scales. We used small (1.54 m(2)), throughfall exclusion shelters to evaluate the role soil moisture and temperature as temporal controls on soil CO2 efflux from a humid tropical forest in Puerto Rico. We measured hourly soil CO2 efflux, temperature and moisture in control and exclusion plots (n = 6) for 6-months. The variance of each time series was analyzed using orthonormal wavelet transformation and Haar-wavelet coherence. We found strong negative coherence between soil moisture and soil respiration in control plots corresponding to a two-day periodicity. Across all plots, there was a significant parabolic relationship between soil moisture and soil CO2 efflux with peak soil respiration occurring at volumetric soil moisture of approximately 0.375 m(3)/m(3). We additionally found a weak positive coherence between CO2 and temperature at longer time-scales and a significant positive relationship between soil temperature and CO2 efflux when the analysis was limited to the control plots. The coherence between CO2 and both temperature and soil moisture were reduced in exclusion plots. The reduced CO2 response to temperature in exclusion plots suggests that the positive effect of temperature on CO2 is constrained by soil moisture availability.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3846571?pdf=render
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