4.6 Article

Isotopic air sampling in a tallgrass prairie to partition net ecosystem CO2 exchange -: art. no. 4566

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES
Volume 108, Issue D18, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2002JD003369

Keywords

net ecosystem exchange; carbon isotopes; discrimination; isoflux; C-3-C-4 composition; photosynthesis model; canopy carbon modeling

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[1] Stable isotope ratios of various ecosystem components and net ecosystem exchange (NEE) CO2 fluxes were measured in a C-3-C-4 mixture tallgrass prairie near Manhattan, Kansas. The July 2002 study period was chosen because of contrasting soil moisture contents, which allowed us to address the effects of drought on photosynthetic CO2 uptake and isotopic discrimination. Significantly higher NEE fluxes were observed for both daytime uptake and nighttime respiration during well- watered conditions when compared to a drought period. Given these differences, we investigated two carbon-flux partitioning questions: ( 1) What proportions of NEE were contributed by C-3 versus C-4 species? ( 2) What proportions of NEE fluxes resulted from canopy assimilation versus ecosystem respiration? To evaluate these questions, air samples were collected every 2 hours during daytime for 3 consecutive days at the same height as the eddy covariance system. These air samples were analyzed for both carbon isotope ratios and CO2 concentrations to establish an empirical relationship for isoflux calculations. An automated air sampling system was used to collect nighttime air samples to estimate the carbon isotope ratios of ecosystem respiration (delta(R)) at weekly intervals for the entire growing season. Models of C-3 and C-4 photosynthesis were employed to estimate bulk canopy intercellular CO2 concentration in order to calculate photosynthetic discrimination against C-13. Our isotope/NEE results showed that for this grassland, C-4 vegetation contributed similar to 80% of the NEE fluxes during the drought period and later similar to 100% of the NEE fluxes in response to an impulse of intense precipitation. For the entire growing season, the C-4 contribution ranged from similar to 68% early in the spring to nearly 100% in the late summer. Using an isotopic approach, the calculated partitioned respiratory fluxes were slightly greater than chamber-measured estimates during midday under well- watered conditions. In addition, time series analyses of our delta(R) measurements revealed that occasionally during periods of high wind speed ( increasing the sampling footprint) the C-3 cropland and forests surrounding the C-4 prairie could be detected and had an impact on the carbon isotopic signal. The implication is that isotopic air sampling of CO2 can be useful as a tracer for evaluating the fetch of upwind airflow in a heterogeneous ecosystem.

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