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Summer rain pulses may stimulate a CO2 release rather than absorption in desert halophyte communities
Authors:Ran Liu  Ellen Cieraad  Yan Li
Institution:1. State Key Lab of Desert and Oasis Ecology, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 818 South Beijing Road, Urumqi, Xinjiang, 830011, China
2. Landcare Research, PO Box 40, Lincoln, 7640, New Zealand
Abstract:

Background and aims

The response of plants and soil to rain pulses determines seasonal variations in the exchange of materials and energy at the ecosystem scale in arid and semi-arid regions. We assessed how the ecosystem carbon exchange (NEE) of desert halophyte communities of different plant functional-types responds to summer precipitation pulses in Tamarix and Haloxylon communities.

Methods

Plant water status, photosynthetic gas exchange, soil respiration and net ecosystem carbon exchange were measured to test the hypothesis that high physiological sensitivity may induce a greater changes in NEE resulting from the summer precipitation pulses in Haloxylon community.

Results

Plant water status and photosynthetic assimilation did not differ before and after summer precipitation pulses in either community. In contrast, soil respiration and NEE responded strongly to summer precipitation events in both communities. At the ecosystem level, precipitation pulses induced a pulse of CO2 release, rather than absorption. The NEE response to summer precipitation was less in the deep-rooted Tamarix community, compared to the shallow-rooted Haloxylon community, which was even converted into a carbon source after summer precipitation inputs. As a result, the effect of summer precipitation inputs on soil respiration was more important than the plant (carbon assimilation) response in determining the ecosystem response to episodic precipitation pulses.
Keywords:
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