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Forest soil respiration reflects plant productivity across a temperature gradient in the Alps

Abstract

Soil respiration (R s) plays a key role in any consideration of ecosystem carbon (C) balance. Based on the well-known temperature response of respiration in plant tissue and microbes, R s is often assumed to increase in a warmer climate. Yet, we assume that substrate availability (labile C input) is the dominant influence on R s rather than temperature. We present an analysis of NPP components and concurrent R s in temperate deciduous forests across an elevational gradient in Switzerland corresponding to a 6K difference in mean annual temperature and a considerable difference in the length of the growing season (174 vs. 262days). The sum of the short-lived NPP fractions ("canopy leaf litter,” "understory litter,” and "fine root litter”) did not differ across this thermal gradient (+6% from cold to warm sites, n.s.), irrespective of the fact that estimated annual forest wood production was more than twice as high at low compared to high elevations (largely explained by the length of the growing season). Cumulative annual R s did not differ significantly between elevations (836±5g C m−2 a−1 and 933±40g C m−2 a−1 at cold and warm sites, +12%). Annual soil CO2 release thus largely reflected the input of labile C and not temperature, despite the fact that R s showed the well-known short-term temperature response within each site. However, at any given temperature, R s was lower at the warm sites (downregulation). These results caution against assuming strong positive effects of climatic warming on R s, but support a close substrate relatedness of R

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