4.7 Article

Incorporation and remobilization of 13C within the fine-root systems of individual Abies alba trees in a temperate coniferous stand

期刊

TREE PHYSIOLOGY
卷 30, 期 12, 页码 1515-1527

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/treephys/tpq090

关键词

carbon fluxes and pools; pulse-labelling; stable carbon isotope; silver fir; fine-root cellulose; fine-root starch

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资金

  1. Swiss Secretariat for Education and Research
  2. COST Action [E38]
  3. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [E38] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)

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Forest ecosystems have a large carbon (C) storage capacity, which depends on their productivity and the residence time of C. Therefore, the time interval between C assimilation and its return to the atmosphere is an important parameter for determining C storage. Especially fine roots (<= 2 mm in diameter) undergo constant replacement and provide a large biomass input to the soil. In this study, we aimed to determine the residence time of C in living fine roots and the decomposition rates of dead fine roots. Therefore, we pulse-labelled nine 20-year-old individual silver fir trees (Abies alba Miller; similar to 70 cm tall) with (CO2)-C-13 in situ to trace the assimilated C over time into the fine-root systems. Whole trees were harvested at different time points after labelling in autumn, biomass was determined and cellulose and starch of fine roots were extracted. Moreover, soil cores were taken and ingrowth cores installed, in which fine roots were genetically identified, to assess incorporation and remobilization of C-13 in the fine roots of silver fir trees; litterbags were used to determine fine-root decomposition rates. The C-13 label was incorporated in the fine-root system as cellulose within 3 days, with highest values after 30 days, before reaching background levels after 1 year. The highest delta C-13 values were found in starch throughout the experiment. C-13 recovery and carbon mean residence times did not differ significantly among fine-root diameter classes, indicating size-independent C turnover times in fine roots of A. alba trees of similar to 219 days. Furthermore, carbon was remobilized from starch into newly grown fine roots in the next spring after our autumn labelling. One year after installation, litterbags with fine roots revealed a decrease of biomass of similar to 40% with relative C-13 content in fine-root bulk biomass and cellulose of similar to 50%, indicating a faster loss of C-13-labelled compounds compared with bulk biomass. Our results also suggest that genetic analysis of fine-root fragments found in soil and ingrowth cores is advisable when working in mixed forest stands with trees of similar fine-root morphology. Only then can one avoid dilution of the labelling signal by mistake, due to analysis of non-labelled non-target species roots.

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