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Drought turns a Central European Norway spruce forest soil from an N 2 O source to a transient N 2 O sink
Author(s) -
GOLDBERG STEFANIE DANIELA,
GEBAUER GERHARD
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
global change biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.146
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1365-2486
pISSN - 1354-1013
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2008.01752.x
Subject(s) - throughfall , sink (geography) , soil water , environmental science , subsoil , hydrology (agriculture) , picea abies , soil horizon , agronomy , soil science , ecology , geology , geography , cartography , geotechnical engineering , biology
Based on current climate scenarios, a higher frequency of summer drought periods followed by heavy rainfall events is predicted for Central Europe. It is expected that drying/rewetting events induce an increased matter cycling in soils and may contribute considerably to increased emissions of the greenhouse gas N 2 O on annual scales. To investigate the influence of drying/rewetting events on N 2 O emissions in a mature Norway spruce forest in the Fichtelgebirge area (NE Bavaria, Germany), a summer drought period of 46 days was induced by roof installations on triplicate plots, followed by a rewetting event of 66 mm experimental rainfall in 2 days. Three nonmanipulated plots served as controls. The experimentally induced soil drought was accompanied by a natural drought. During the drought period, the soil of both the throughfall exclusion and control plots served as an N 2 O sink. This was accompanied by subambient N 2 O concentrations in upper soil horizons. The sink strength of the throughfall exclusion plots was doubled compared with the control plots. We conclude that the soil water status together with the soil nitrate availability was an important driving factor for the N 2 O sink strength. Rewetting quickly turned the soil into a source for atmospheric N 2 O again, but it took almost 4 months to turn the cumulative soil N 2 O fluxes from negative (sink) to positive (source) values. N 2 O concentration and isotope analyses along soil profiles revealed that N 2 O produced in the subsoil was subsequently consumed during upward diffusion along the soil profile throughout the entire experiment. Our results show that long drought periods can lead to drastic decreases of N 2 O fluxes from soils to the atmosphere or may even turn forest soils temporarily to N 2 O sinks. Accumulation of more field‐scale data on soil N 2 O uptake as well as a better understanding of underlying mechanisms would essentially advance our knowledge of the global N 2 O budget.