Effect of dry-wet cycles on carbon dioxide release from two different volcanic ash soils in a Japanese temperate forest
2019
Nagano, Hirohiko | Atarashi-Andoh, Mariko | Koarashi, Jun
In the present study, two volcanic ash soils (soil A and B) from a temperate broad-leaved forest in eastern Japan were aerobically incubated under repeated dry-wet cycles and continuously constant moisture conditions. The primary aims were to quantify the potential for enhancement of carbon dioxide (CO₂) release owing to increased water fluctuation and to examine differences in the responses of volcanic ash soils with different physicochemical properties. Soil B, rather than soil A, was a typical Andosol. During incubation at 20°C for 120 days with five dry-wet cycles, the CO₂ release rate was measured periodically. Abundance of the stable carbon isotope in CO₂ (δ¹³C-CO₂) was measured to capture changes in the origin of decomposed soil organic matter (SOM) owing to the dry-wet cycles. The CO₂ release rate under the dry-wet cycles was up to 49% higher than the values predicted from a parabolic relationship between CO₂ release and water content during incubation under the continuously constant moisture condition. The magnitude of CO₂ release enhancement was 2.7-fold higher in soil B relative to that in soil A. The δ¹³C-CO₂ value in the dry-wet cycles was enriched by 0.3–2.3‰ compared to that during incubation under the continuously constant moisture conditions, suggesting that the decomposition of well-metabolized and/or old SOM was enhanced by the dry-wet cycles. Thus, the present study suggests that Andosols, which have been believed to have a strong SOM stabilization ability, are vulnerable to dry-wet cycles. Then, increased water fluctuation in a future warmer world would have significant potential to stimulate CO₂ release from soils.
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