Effects of whole-soil warming on CH 4 and N 2 O fluxes in an alpine grassland.
Ying ChenMengguang HanWenkuan QinYanhui HouZhenhua ZhangBiao ZhuPublished in: Global change biology (2024)
Global climate warming could affect the methane (CH 4 ) and nitrous oxide (N 2 O) fluxes between soils and the atmosphere, but how CH 4 and N 2 O fluxes respond to whole-soil warming is unclear. Here, we for the first time investigated the effects of whole-soil warming on CH 4 and N 2 O fluxes in an alpine grassland ecosystem on the Tibetan Plateau, and also studied the effects of experimental warming on CH 4 and N 2 O fluxes across terrestrial ecosystems through a global-scale meta-analysis. The whole-soil warming (0-100 cm, +4°C) significantly elevated soil N 2 O emission by 101%, but had a minor effect on soil CH 4 uptake. However, the meta-analysis revealed that experimental warming did not significantly alter CH 4 and N 2 O fluxes, and it may be that most field warming experiments could only heat the surface soils. Moreover, the warming-induced higher plant litter and available N in soils may be the main reason for the higher N 2 O emission under whole-soil warming in the alpine grassland. We need to pay more attention to the long-term response of greenhouse gases (including CH 4 and N 2 O fluxes) from different soil depths to whole-soil warming over year-round, which could help us more accurately assess and predict the ecosystem-climate feedback under realistic warming scenarios in the future.