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Belowground Carbon Allocation of Natural Quercus mongolica Forests Estimated from Litterfall and Soil Respiration Measurements  

Yi Myong-Jong (Division of Forest Resources, Kangwon National University)
Son Yowhan (Division of Environmental Science and Ecological Engineering, Korea University)
Jin Hyun-O (College of Life and Biotechnology, Kyunhee University)
Park In-Hyeop (Department of Forest Resources, Sunchon National University)
Kim Dong-Yeop (Department of Landscape Architecture, Sungkyunkwan University)
Kim Yong-Suk (Division of Forest Resources, Kangwon National University)
Shin Dong-Min (Division of Forest Resources, Kangwon National University)
Publication Information
Korean Journal of Agricultural and Forest Meteorology / v.7, no.3, 2005 , pp. 227-234 More about this Journal
Abstract
From published data of mature forests worldwide, Raich and Nadelhoffer suggested that total belowground carbon allocation (TBCA) could be estimated from the difference between annual rates of soil respiration and aboveground litterfall. Here we analyze new measurements of IRGA-based soil respiration and litterfall of natural mature oak forests dominated by Quercus mongolica in Korea. Rates of in situ soil respiration and aboveground litter production are highly and positively correlated. Our results disagree with the Raich and Nadelhoffer model far world forests. A regression analysis of the data from Q. mongolica forests produced the following relationship: annual soil respiration : 141 + 2.08 ${\times}$ annual litterfall. The least squares regression line has a more gentle slope (2.08) than the slope (2.92) described by Raich and Nedelhoffer for mature forests worldwide. The regression slope of our study indicates that, on average, soil respiration is about two times the aboveground litterfall-C, which further implies that TBCA is similar with annual aboveground litterfall-C at natural Q. mongolica forests in Korea. The non-zero Y-intercept (141) of the regression indicates that TBCA may be greater than litterfall-C where litterfall rate are relativery low. Over a gradient of litterfall-C ranging from 200-370 g C $m^{-2}yr^{-l}$, TBCA increased from 350-530 g C $m^{-2}yr^{-l}$.
Keywords
Total belowground carbon allocation (TBCA); Litterfall; Quercus mongolica; Soil respiration;
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