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Globally rising soil heterotrophic respiration over recent decades

Ben Bond-Lamberty (), Vanessa L. Bailey, Min Chen, Christopher M. Gough and Rodrigo Vargas
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Ben Bond-Lamberty: Joint Global Change Research Institute at the University of Maryland–College Park
Vanessa L. Bailey: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Min Chen: Joint Global Change Research Institute at the University of Maryland–College Park
Christopher M. Gough: Virginia Commonwealth University
Rodrigo Vargas: University of Delaware

Nature, 2018, vol. 560, issue 7716, 80-83

Abstract: Abstract Global soils store at least twice as much carbon as Earth’s atmosphere1,2. The global soil-to-atmosphere (or total soil respiration, RS) carbon dioxide (CO2) flux is increasing3,4, but the degree to which climate change will stimulate carbon losses from soils as a result of heterotrophic respiration (RH) remains highly uncertain5–8. Here we use an updated global soil respiration database9 to show that the observed soil surface RH:RS ratio increased significantly, from 0.54 to 0.63, between 1990 and 2014 (P = 0.009). Three additional lines of evidence provide support for this finding. By analysing two separate global gross primary production datasets10,11, we find that the ratios of both RH and RS to gross primary production have increased over time. Similarly, significant increases in RH are observed against the longest available solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence global dataset, as well as gross primary production computed by an ensemble of global land models. We also show that the ratio of night-time net ecosystem exchange to gross primary production is rising across the FLUXNET201512 dataset. All trends are robust to sampling variability in ecosystem type, disturbance, methodology, CO2 fertilization effects and mean climate. Taken together, our findings provide observational evidence that global RH is rising, probably in response to environmental changes, consistent with meta-analyses13–16 and long-term experiments17. This suggests that climate-driven losses of soil carbon are currently occurring across many ecosystems, with a detectable and sustained trend emerging at the global scale.

Date: 2018
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DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0358-x

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