4.7 Article

Effects of aspect and altitude on carbon cycling processes in a temperate mountain forest catchment

期刊

LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY
卷 34, 期 2, 页码 325-340

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10980-019-00769-z

关键词

Mountain forest C cycle; Soil CO2 efflux; Net primary production; Net ecosystem production; Aspect; Altitude; LTER Zobelboden

资金

  1. Austrian Climate Research Program
  2. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program
  3. Austrian Academy of Sciences Research Program (Earth System Sciences)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

ContextVarying altitudes and aspects within small distances are typically found in mountainous areas. Such a complex topography complicates the accurate quantification of forest C dynamics at larger scales.ObjectivesWe determined the effects of altitude and aspect on forest C cycling in a typical, mountainous catchment in the Northern Limestone Alps.MethodsForest C pools and fluxes were measured along two altitudinal gradients (650-900m a.s.l.) at south-west (SW) and north-east (NE) facing slopes. Net ecosystem production (NEP) was estimated using a biometric approach combining field measurements of aboveground biomass and soil CO2 efflux (SR) with allometric functions, root:shoot ratios and empirical SR modeling.ResultsNEP was higher at the SW facing slope (6.603.01tCha(-1)year(-1)), when compared to the NE facing slope (4.36 +/- 2.61 tCha(-1)year(-1)). SR was higher at the SW facing slope too, balancing out any difference in NEP between aspects (NE: 1.30 +/- 3.23tCha(-1)year(-1), SW: 1.65 +/- 3.34tCha(-1)year(-1)). Soil organic C stocks significantly decreased with altitude. Forest NPP and NEP did not show clear altitudinal trends within the catchment.Conclusions Under current climate conditions, altitude and aspect adversely affect C sequestering and releasing processes, resulting in a relatively uniform forest NEP in the catchment. Hence, including detailed climatic and soil conditions, which are driven by altitude and aspect, will unlikely improve forest NEP estimates at the scale of the studied catchment. In a future climate, however, shifts in temperature and precipitation may disproportionally affect forest C cycling at the southward slopes through increased water limitation.

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