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Topographic and climatic controls on soil environments and net primary production in a rugged temperate hardwood forest in Korea
Authors:Sinkyu?Kang  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:kangsk@kangwon.ac.kr"   title="  kangsk@kangwon.ac.kr"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,Dowon?Lee,Jangho?Lee,Steven?W.?Running
Affiliation:(1) Department of Environmental Science, Kangwon National University, Chunchon, Kangwon-do, 200-701, Republic of Korea;(2) Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Seoul National University, Seoul, 151-742, Republic of Korea;(3) Numerical Teradynamic Simulation Group, School of Forestry, University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812, USA
Abstract:Eight years (1994–2001) of field data and a biogeochemical process model, BIOME-BGC, were used to examine effects of local topography and inter-annual climatic variability on soil physical (i.e., soil moisture and temperature) and biogeochemical (i.e., organic matter content, soil respiration, and leaf litter production) variables in a temperate hardwood forest in Korea. The field data were collected from adjacent south-facing (S) and north-facing (N) slopes, respectively, to examine effects of local topography, and were utilized to validate predictability according to BIOME-BGC which was applied to model unmeasured hydro-ecological processes [i.e., evapotranspiration, net primary production (NPP), and net ecosystem exchange of carbon]. Our field-data analyses indicated that soil-related variables including soil temperature, water content, organic matter, soil respiration, and floor leaf litter store significantly differed between the S and N slopes, while leaf litter production did not differ as significantly as the soil-related variables. The BIOME-BGC predictions showed good agreement with the mean field data aggregated across the slopes. Our simulation results and field observations indicated that the inter-annual variations of leaf litter production and maximum leaf area index were best explained by precipitation, both at a 1-year lag, while variation in annual NPP was well correlated with precipitation without a temporal lag. Our results imply that: (1) local topography needs to be explicitly considered in ecosystem studies as a forcing function generating spatial heterogeneity in soil physical and biogeochemical variables within a rugged landscape, and (2) water limits vegetation productivity in our study forest, in spite of a relatively high annual precipitation rate (1,579 mm year–1).
Keywords:Climate variability  Topography  Primary production  Temperate hardwood forest
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