Studying Soil and Tree Stem Respiration in Mediterranean oak forest
using the Respiratory Quotient
Abstract
Forests exchange CO and O with the atmosphere at similar molar ratios.
Correspondingly, the apparent respiratory quotient (CO/O flux ratio,
ARQ) is expected to be ≈1 given the stoichiometry of organic substrates
in soils and plants. However, measured ARQ values often deviate from ≈1,
and it is still unclear how CO and O fluxes are balanced among ecosystem
components, and what are the sources of ARQ variability. Here we
measured ARQ of soil pore space air (ARQ), and in headspace air from
incubations of bulk-soil (ARQ), tree stem-cores (ARQ) and roots in 10
measurement campaigns over 15 months in a Mediterranean oak forest. Mean
(range) values were: ARQ = 0.76 (0.60-0.92), ARQ = 0.75 (0.53-0.90), and
ARQ = 0.39 (0.19-0.70). As expected, ARQ was usually higher than ARQ and
lower than the ARQ of incubated roots (range of 0.73-0.96). Variability
in ARQ was correlated with soil moisture parameters. Temperature
positively correlated with ARQ and ARQoutside the growing season.
Abiotic O uptake by Fe was demonstrated to reduce ARQ, but this effect
would be significant under field conditions only if respiration rates
are very low. We hypothesize that low measured ARQ values likely result
from selective decomposition of reduced compounds and physical
protection of oxidized compounds. ARQ, measured at two stem positions,
was lower than expected from oxidation of any possible substrate,
indicating partial retention of respired C. The overall ARQ <1
reveals an imbalance of stem-soil CO and O fluxes that is unexpected at
the ecosystem level.