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Journal ArticleDOI

Irrigation and enhanced soil carbon input effects on below-ground carbon cycling in semiarid temperate grasslands.

TLDR
The response of plant productivity to POM addition (and associated release of nutrients) leads us to believe that plant productivity in the semiarid grassland ecosystems of northern China is primarily limited by nutrients and not by water.
Abstract
Summary • Global climate change is generally expected to increase net primary production, resulting in increased soil carbon (C) inputs. To gain an understanding of how such increased soil C inputs would affect C cycling in the vast grasslands of northern China, we conducted a field experiment in which the responses of plant and microbial biomass and respiration were studied. • Our experiment included the below-ground addition of particulate organic matter (POM) at rates equivalent to 0, 60, 120 and 240 g C m−2, under either natural precipitation or under enhanced precipitation during the summer period (as predicted for that region in recent simulations using general circulation models). • We observed that addition of POM had a large effect on soil microbial biomass and activity and that a major part of the added C was rapidly lost from the system. This suggests that microbial activity in the vast temperate grassland ecosystems of northern China is energy-limited. Moreover, POM addition (and the associated nutrient release) affected plant growth much more than the additional water input. • Although we performed no direct fertilization experiments, the response of plant productivity to POM addition (and associated release of nutrients) leads us to believe that plant productivity in the semiarid grassland ecosystems of northern China is primarily limited by nutrients and not by water.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Responses of terrestrial ecosystems to temperature and precipitation change: a meta-analysis of experimental manipulation.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used metaanalysis to synthesize ecosystem-level responses to warming, altered precipitation, and their combination, focusing on plant growth and ecosystem carbon (C) balance, including biomass, net primary production (NPP), respiration, net ecosystem exchange (NEE), and ecosystem photosynthesis.
Journal ArticleDOI

The melting Himalayas: cascading effects of climate change on water, biodiversity, and livelihoods.

TL;DR: The cascading effects of rising temperatures and loss of ice and snow in the region are affecting, for example, water availability, biodiversity, biodiversity and ecosystem boundary shifts, and global feedbacks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Primary production and rain use efficiency across a precipitation gradient on the Mongolia Plateau.

TL;DR: The results clearly indicate that the patterns of both ANPP and RUE are scale dependent, and the seemingly conflicting patterns of RUE in space vs. time suggest distinctive underlying mechanisms, involving interactions among precipitation, soil N, and biotic factors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impacts of altered precipitation regimes on soil communities and biogeochemistry in arid and semi-arid ecosystems.

TL;DR: A new conceptual framework is proposed that incorporates hierarchical biotic responses to individual precipitation events more explicitly, including moderation of microbial activity and biomass by invertebrate grazing, and is used to make some predictions on impacts of altered precipitation regimes in terms of event size and frequency as well as mean annual precipitation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Different responses of soil respiration and its components to nitrogen addition among biomes: a meta-analysis

TL;DR: A comprehensive meta-analysis of 295 published studies to examine the responses of Rs and its components to N addition in terrestrial ecosystems shows that N addition significantly increased Rs across all biomes but decreased by 1.44% in forests and increased by 7.4% in grasslands and croplands.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Climate change 2001: the scientific basis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an overview of the climate system and its dynamics, including observed climate variability and change, the carbon cycle, atmospheric chemistry and greenhouse gases, and their direct and indirect effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

An extraction method for measuring soil microbial biomass c

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of fumigation on organic C extractable by 0.5 m K2SO4 were examined in a contrasting range of soils and it was shown that both ATP and organic C rendered decomposable by CHCl3 came from the soil microbial biomass.
Journal ArticleDOI

Temperature sensitivity of soil carbon decomposition and feedbacks to climate change

TL;DR: This work has suggested that several environmental constraints obscure the intrinsic temperature sensitivity of substrate decomposition, causing lower observed ‘apparent’ temperature sensitivity, and these constraints may, themselves, be sensitive to climate.
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