Modeling carbon dynamics in two adjacent spruce forests with different soil conditions in Russia

International audience Net ecosystem carbon exchange (NEE) were measured with eddy covariance method for two adjacent forests located at the southern boundary of European taiga in Russia in 1999?2004. The two spruce forests shared similar vegetation composition but differed in soil conditions. The w...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kurbatova, J., Li, C., Varlagin, A., Xiao, X., Vygodskaya, N.
Other Authors: A.N. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences Moscow (RAS), Institute for Study of Earth, Oceans and Space, University of New Hampshire (UNH)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.science/hal-00297963
https://hal.science/hal-00297963/document
https://hal.science/hal-00297963/file/bgd-5-271-2008.pdf
Description
Summary:International audience Net ecosystem carbon exchange (NEE) were measured with eddy covariance method for two adjacent forests located at the southern boundary of European taiga in Russia in 1999?2004. The two spruce forests shared similar vegetation composition but differed in soil conditions. The wet spruce forest (WSF) possessed a thick peat layer (60 cm) with a high water table seasonally close to or above the soil surface. The dry spruce forest (DSF) had a relatively thin organic layer (5 cm) with a deep water table (>60 cm). The measured NEE fluxes (2000 and ?1440 kg C ha ?1 yr ?1 for WSF and DSF, respectively) indicated that WSF was a source while DSF a sink of atmospheric carbon dioxide during the experimental years. A process-based model, Forest-DNDC, was employed in the study to interpret the observations. The modeled NEE fluxes were 1800 and ?2200 kg C ha ?1 yr ?1 for WSF and DSF, respectively, which were comparable with the observations. The modeled data indicated that WSF and DSF had similar rates of photosynthesis and plant autotrophic respiration but differed in soil heterotrophic respiration. The simulations resulted in a hypothesis that the water table fluctuation at WSF could play a key role in determining the negative C balance in the ecosystem. A sensitivity test was conducted by running Forest-DNDC with varied water table scenarios for WSF. The results proved that the NEE fluxes from WSF were highly sensitive to the water table depth. When the water table dropped, the length of flooding season became shorter and more organic matter in the soil profile suffered from rapid decomposition that converted the ecosystem into a source atmospheric C. The conclusion from this modeling study could be applicable for a wide range of wetland and forest ecosystems that have accumulated soil organic C while face hydrological changes under certain climatic or land-use change scenarios.