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Variability of the Apparent Respiratory Quotient of a forest Soils and Tree Stems
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  • Boaz Hilman,
  • Tal Weiner,
  • Tom Haran,
  • Alon Angert
Boaz Hilman
Max-Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Tal Weiner
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Tom Haran
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Alon Angert
Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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Abstract

The CO2/O2 fluxes ratio (ARQ) measured in soils and plants contains valuable information about the respiratory-substrate stoichiometry and biotic and abiotic non-respiratory processes reacting with the gases. For meaningful use in biogeochemical studies it is necessary to resolve the substrate and processes effects. In addition, unique ARQ signatures can be used to weight contributions to soil respiration. We investigated these uses by measurements in soil pore space air (ARQsa), and in headspace air from incubations of bulk-soil (ARQbs) and tree stem-tissues (ARQts for fresh tissues; ARQts24 after 24-h storage) in 10 measurement campaigns over 15 months in a Mediterranean oak forest. Mean (range) values were: ARQsa = 0.76 (0.60-0.92), ARQbs = 0.75 (0.53-0.90), ARQts = 0.39 (0.19-0.70), and ARQts24 = 0.68 (0.42-1.08). Both ARQts and ARQts24 were below 1.0, the value expected for carbohydrate respiration in plants. Involvement of non-respiratory processes like non-phototrophic CO2 re-fixation and wound-response O2 uptake (for ARQts) can explain the results. The mean ARQbs (0.75) probably represents the stoichiometry of the respiratory substrate, which is lower than expected using bulk soil organic matter (SOM) stoichiometry (~0.95), suggesting a labile, less oxidized, SOM pool contributes more to respiration fluxes. Abiotic O2 uptake by Fe2+ was demonstrated to reduce ARQbs to 0.37, at the most, but estimated to have small effect under typical respiration rates. ARQsa was usually higher than ARQbs and lower than root ARQ (which, when measured, ranged from 0.73-0.96), demonstrating the potential of ARQ to partition the autotrophic and heterotrophic sources of soil respiration.