Primary Productivity and Water Balance of Grassland Vegetation on Three Soils in a Continuous CO₂ Gradient: Initial Results from the Lysimeter CO₂ Gradient Experiment

Field studies of atmospheric CO₂ effects on ecosystems usually include few levels of CO₂ and a single soil type, making it difficult to ascertain the shape of responses to increasing CO₂ or to generalize across soil types. The Lysimeter CO₂ Gradient (LYCOG) chambers were constructed to maintain a li...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecosystems (New York) 2009-08, Vol.12 (5), p.699-714
Hauptverfasser: Fay, Philip A, Kelley, Alexia M, Procter, Andrew C, Hui, Dafeng, Jin, Virginia L, Jackson, Robert B, Johnson, Hyrum B, Polley, H. Wayne
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Field studies of atmospheric CO₂ effects on ecosystems usually include few levels of CO₂ and a single soil type, making it difficult to ascertain the shape of responses to increasing CO₂ or to generalize across soil types. The Lysimeter CO₂ Gradient (LYCOG) chambers were constructed to maintain a linear gradient of atmospheric CO₂ (~250 to 500 μl l⁻¹) on grassland vegetation established on intact soil monoliths from three soil series. The chambers maintained a linear daytime CO₂ gradient from 263 μl l⁻¹ at the subambient end of the gradient to 502 μl l⁻¹ at the superambient end, as well as a linear nighttime CO₂ gradient. Temperature variation within the chambers affected aboveground biomass and evapotranspiration, but the effects of temperature were small compared to the expected effects of CO₂. Aboveground biomass on Austin soils was 40% less than on Bastrop and Houston soils. Biomass differences between soils resulted from variation in biomass of Sorghastrum nutans, Bouteloua curtipendula, Schizachyrium scoparium (C₄ grasses), and Solidago canadensis (C₃ forb), suggesting the CO₂ sensitivity of these species may differ among soils. Evapotranspiration did not differ among the soils, but the CO₂ sensitivity of leaf-level photosynthesis and water use efficiency in S. canadensis was greater on Houston and Bastrop than on Austin soils, whereas the CO₂ sensitivity of soil CO₂ efflux was greater on Bastrop soils than on Austin or Houston soils. The effects of soil type on CO₂ sensitivity may be smaller for some processes that are tightly coupled to microclimate. LYCOG is useful for discerning the effects of soil type on the CO₂ sensitivity of ecosystem function in grasslands.
ISSN:1432-9840
1435-0629
DOI:10.1007/s10021-009-9247-3