Changes in labile carbon (LC) pools and microbial communities are the primary factors controlling soil heterotrophic respiration (R h ) in warming experiments. Warming is expected to initially increase R h but studies show this increase may not be continuous or sustained. Specifically, LC and soil microbiome have been shown to contribute to the effect of extended warming on R h . However, their relative contribution is unclear and this gap in knowledge causes considerable uncertainty in the prediction of carbon cycle feedbacks to climate change. In this study, we used a two-step incubation approach to reveal the relative contribution of LC limitation and soil microbial community responses in attenuating the effect that extended warming has on R h . Soil samples from three Tibetan ecosystems-an alpine meadow (AM), alpine steppe (AS), and desert steppe (DS)-were exposed to a temperature gradient of 5-25°C. After an initial incubation period, soils were processed in one of two methods: (a) soils were sterilized then inoculated with parent soil microbes to assess the LC limitation effects, while controlling for microbial community responses; or (b) soil microbes from the incubations were used to inoculate sterilized parent soils to assess the microbial community effects, while controlling for LC limitation. We found both LC limitation and microbial community responses led to significant declines in R h by 37% and 30%, respectively, but their relative contributions were ecosystem specific. LC limitation alone caused a greater R h decrease for DS soils than AMs or ASs. Our study demonstrates that soil carbon loss due to R h in Tibetan alpine soils-especially in copiotrophic soils-will be weakened by microbial community responses under short-term warming.
The overland flow erosion is common and became more serious because of the climate warming inducing more runoff in the Tibet Plateau. The purposes of this study were to evaluate the effects of flow rate, slope gradient, shear stress, stream power, unit stream power and unit energy of water-carrying section on the soil detachment capacity for the soil in the Tibet Plateau of China due to the information is limited. To achieve this aim, laboratory experiments were performed under six flow rates (5, 10, 15, 20, 25 and 30 L min −1 ) and six slope gradients (8.74%, 17.63%, 26.79%, 36.40%, 46.63 and 57.73%) by using a slope-adjustable steel hydraulic flume (4 m length, 0.4 m width, 0.2 m depth). The results indicated that soil detachment capacity ranged from 0.173 to 6.325 kg m −2 s −1 with 1.972 kg m −2 s −1 on average. The soil detachment capacity increased with power function as the flow rate and the slope gradient augmented (R 2 = 0.965, NRMSE = 0.177 and NSE = 0.954). The soil detachment capacity was more influenced by flow rate than by slope gradient in this study. The relation between soil detachment capacity and shear stress, stream power, unit stream power and unit energy of water-carrying section can be described by using the linear function and power function, the power function relationship performed better than the linear function in generally. The stream power exhibits the best performance in describing the soil detachment capacity among shear stress, stream power, unit stream power and unit energy of water-carrying section in this study. The erodibility value in this study was larger than and the critical shear stress was less than those for soil in the eastern China. There has a huge potential for the soil in the Tibet Plateau eroded by the water erosion when enough runoff exiting. More attention should be payed to the water erosion process and mechanism in the Tibet Plateau area in the future.
Changes in day (maximum temperature, TMAX) and night temperature (minimum temperature, TMIN) in the preseason (e.g., winter and spring) may have opposite effects on early phenophases (e.g., leafing and flowering) due to changing requirements of chilling accumulations (CAC) and heating accumulations (HAC), which could cause advance, delay or no change in early phenophases. However, their relative effects on phenology are largely unexplored, especially on the Tibetan Plateau. Here, observations were performed using a warming and cooling experiment in situ through reciprocal transplantation (2008–2010) on the Tibetan Plateau. We found that winter minimum temperature (TMIN) warming significantly delayed mean early phenophases by 8.60 d/°C, but winter maximum temperature (TMAX) warming advanced them by 12.06 d/°C across six common species. Thus, winter mean temperature warming resulted in a net advance of 3.46 d/°C in early phenophases. In contrast, winter TMIN cooling, on average, significantly advanced early phenophases by 5.12 d/°C, but winter TMAX cooling delayed them by 7.40 d/°C across six common species, resulting in a net delay of 2.28 d/°C for winter mean temperature cooling. The opposing effects of TMAX and TMIN warming on the early phenophases may be mainly caused by decreased CAC due to TMIN warming (5.29 times greater than TMAX) and increased HAC due to TMAX warming (3.25 times greater than TMIN), and similar processes apply to TMAX and TMIN cooling. Therefore, our study provides another insight into why some plant phenophases remain unchanged or delayed under climate change.
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