土壤学
生物群落
环境科学
温带雨林
泰加语
土壤碳
土壤水分
热带和亚热带湿润阔叶林
生态学
温带气候
温带森林
北方的
大气科学
亚热带
生态系统
土壤科学
地质学
生物
作者
Gabriel Gatica,Ma E. Arias Fernández,María Paula Juliarena,Javier Gyenge
摘要
Abstract Forest soils are the most important terrestrial sink of atmospheric methane (CH 4 ). Climatic, soil and anthropogenic drivers affect CH 4 fluxes, but it is poorly known the relative weight of each driver and whether all drivers have similar effects across forest biomes. We compiled a database of 478 in situ estimations of CH 4 fluxes in forest soils from 191 peer‐reviewed studies. All forest biomes (boreal, temperate, tropical and subtropical) but savannahs act on average as CH 4 sinks, which presented positive fluxes in 65% of the sites. Mixed effects models showed that combined climatic and edaphic variables had the best support, but anthropogenic factors did not have a significant effect on CH 4 fluxes at global scale. This model explained only 19% of the variance in soil CH 4 flux which decreased with declines in precipitation and increases in temperature, and with increases in soil organic carbon, bulk density and soil acidification. The effects of these drivers were inconsistent across biomes, increasing the model explanation of observed variance to 34% when the drivers have a different slope for each biome. Despite this limited explanatory value which could be related to the use of soil variables calculated at coarse scale (~1 km), our study shows that soil CH 4 fluxes in forests are determined by different environmental variables in different biomes. The most sensitive system to all studied drivers were the temperate forests, while boreal forests were insensitive to climatic variables, but highly sensitive to edaphic factors. Subtropical forests and savannahs responded similarly to climatic variables, but differed in their response to soil factors. Our results suggest that the increase in temperature predicted in the framework of climate change would promote CH 4 emission (or reduce CH 4 sink) in subtropical and savannah forests, have no influence in boreal and temperate forests and promote uptake in tropical forests.
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