Abstract
Intensive forestry may reduce net CO
2 emission into atmosphere by storing carbon in living biomass, dead organic matter and soil, and durable wood products. Because quantification of belowground carbon dynamics is important for reliable estimation of the carbon sequestered by intensively managed plantations, we examined soil CO
2 efflux (S
CO2) in a 6-year-old loblolly pine (
Pinus taeda L.) plantation in response to weed control (W), weed control plus irrigation (WI), weed control plus irrigation and fertigation (addition of fertilizer to the irrigation water) (WIF), and weed control plus irrigation, fertigation and pest control (WIFP) since plantation establishment. Average S
CO2 ranged from 1.27 to 5.59 µmol m
-2s
-1, and linear models indicated that soil temperature explained up to 56% of the variation in S
CO2. Plot position explained an additional 2–11% of the variation in S
CO2. Soil moisture was only weakly correlated with S
CO2 in the W treatment, and S
CO2 was not significantly correlated to fine root mass. Predicted carbon loss from forest floor respiration ranged between 778 and 966 g C m
-2 year
-1 and was 20% lower in the WIF treatment relative to the W treatment. Annual soil carbon loss through soil respiration declined linearly with increasing carbon content in total root biomass (tap + coarse + fine) at age 6.
Keywords
loblolly pine,
fertilization,
carbon sequestration,
soil respiration
Citation
Samuelson, Lisa J.; Johnsen, Kurt; Stokes, Tom; Lu, Weinlang. 2004. Intensive management modifies soil CO2 efflux in 6-year-old Pinus taeda L. stands. Forest Ecology and Management 200 (2004) 335 345