Wood decomposition and its role in the forest carbon cycle

Q4 Social Sciences Studies in Regional Science Pub Date : 2021-05-25 DOI:10.2737/SRS-GTR-262
C. Trettin, A. Burton, M. Jurgensen, D. Page-Dumroese, Z. Dai, R. Oren, B. Forschler, J. Schilling, D. Lindner
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Dead wood is the largest detrital component within forests, comprising a significant portion of the total carbon (C) pool. Despite its ecological importance, there is insufficient information on the factors affecting wood decomposition, and there are no mechanistic models that effectively simulate wood decay and the incorporation of wood C into soil across North America. Therefore, the objective of this experiment is to establish a long-term experimental framework to serve as a foundation to study decomposition processes in wood and the associated interactions with the underlaying soil. The basic approach is to assess the interactions of site conditions with biological processes mediating wood decomposition by incubating common wood substrates, loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.), aspen (Populus tremuloides Michx.), and birch (Betula papyrifera Marshall) logs in forest ecosystems with different soil and environmental conditions. The unique aspect of this study is the use of logs from Free Air Carbon Dioxide Enrichment (FACE) sites in North Carolina and Wisconsin, which have a distinct δ13C signature that can be followed through the wood decomposition process, thereby providing the capacity to assess the translocation of wood C into soil organic matter pools. In 2011, FACE logs were placed horizontally on the soil surface and vertically without soil contact to simulate standing dead trees, the two dominate positions of dead wood in forest ecosystems. Those samples are to facilitate the study of wood decomposition and associated changes to the soil C pools. The experimental design facilitates the assessment of wood-soil food web, and it capitalizes on the strong foundation of research in the nationwide U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service (USDA-FS) Experimental Forest and Range Network.
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木材分解及其在森林碳循环中的作用
枯木是森林中最大的碎屑成分,占总碳库的很大一部分。尽管它具有生态重要性,但关于影响木材分解的因素的信息不足,也没有有效模拟木材腐烂和木材C融入北美土壤的机制模型。因此,本实验的目的是建立一个长期的实验框架,作为研究木材分解过程以及与下层土壤相关相互作用的基础。基本方法是通过在不同土壤和环境条件的森林生态系统中培育常见的木材基质、火炬松(Pinus taeda L.)、白杨(Populus tremuloides Michx.)和桦树(Betula papyrifera Marshall)原木,来评估场地条件与介导木材分解的生物过程的相互作用。这项研究的独特之处在于使用了来自北卡罗来纳州和威斯康星州的自由空气二氧化碳富集(FACE)场地的原木,这些原木具有独特的δ13C特征,可以在木材分解过程中遵循,从而提供了评估木材C向土壤有机质库迁移的能力。2011年,FACE原木被水平放置在土壤表面,垂直放置在没有土壤接触的情况下,以模拟枯树,这是枯木在森林生态系统中的两个主要位置。这些样本有助于研究木材分解和土壤碳库的相关变化。该实验设计有助于评估木材-土壤-食物网,并利用了美国农业部林业局(USDA-FS)全国性实验森林和牧场网络的强大研究基础。
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来源期刊
Studies in Regional Science
Studies in Regional Science Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
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