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Turnover of Grassland Roots in Mountain Ecosystems Revealed by Their Radiocarbon Signature: Role of Temperature and Management
Authors:Jens Leifeld  Stefanie Meyer  Karen Budge  Maria Teresa Sebastia  Michael Zimmermann  Juerg Fuhrer
Institution:1. Agroscope, Climate/Air Pollution Group, Zurich, Switzerland.; 2. Institute for Geography, Friedrich Schiller Universität, Jena, Germany.; 3. Independent Researcher, Kirkwall, Orkney, United Kingdom.; 4. Forest Sciences Centre of Catalonia, Lleida, Spain.; 5. Dept. HBJ, ETSEA, University of Lleida, Lleida, Spain.; 6. University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna, Department of Forest and Soil Sciences, Vienna, Austria.; University of Western Sydney, AUSTRALIA,
Abstract:Root turnover is an important carbon flux component in grassland ecosystems because it replenishes substantial parts of carbon lost from soil via heterotrophic respiration and leaching. Among the various methods to estimate root turnover, the root’s radiocarbon signature has rarely been applied to grassland soils previously, although the value of this approach is known from studies in forest soils. In this paper, we utilize the root’s radiocarbon signatures, at 25 plots, in mountain grasslands of the montane to alpine zone of Europe. We place the results in context of a global data base on root turnover and discuss driving factors. Root turnover rates were similar to those of a subsample of the global data, comprising a similar temperature range, but measured with different approaches, indicating that the radiocarbon method gives reliable, plausible and comparable results. Root turnover rates (0.06–1.0 y-1) scaled significantly and exponentially with mean annual temperatures. Root turnover rates indicated no trend with soil depth. The temperature sensitivity was significantly higher in mountain grassland, compared to the global data set, suggesting additional factors influencing root turnover. Information on management intensity from the 25 plots reveals that root turnover may be accelerated under intensive and moderate management compared to low intensity or semi-natural conditions. Because management intensity, in the studied ecosystems, co-varied with temperature, estimates on root turnover, based on mean annual temperature alone, may be biased. A greater recognition of management as a driver for root dynamics is warranted when effects of climatic change on belowground carbon dynamics are studied in mountain grasslands.
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