Determining the temperature sensitivity of terrestrial carbon (C) stores is an urgent priority for predicting future climate feedbacks. A key aspect to solve this long‐standing research gap is to determine whether warmer temperatures will increase autotrophic activities leading to greater C storage or promote heterotrophic activities that will drive these systems to become C sources. We experimentally addressed this critical question by subjecting intact plant‐soil systems in a UK upland ecosystem to simulated climate warming under natural field conditions. We report the results of a 13‐year field‐based climate manipulation experiment combining in situ respiration measurements with radiocarbon (14C) analyses of respired CO2, dissolved organ...
Climate warming enhances multiple ecosystem C fluxes, but the net impact of changing C fluxes on soi...
Elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration (eCO2) and climate change may substantially alter soil carbon...
International audienceThe temperature sensitivity of soil organic carbon decomposition is critical f...
Increases in global temperatures due to climate change threaten to tip the balance between carbon (C...
Partially decomposed plant and animal remains have been accumulating in organic soils (i.e.>40% C co...
Increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration is both a strong driver of primary product...
Climatic warming will probably have particularly large impacts on carbon fluxes in high altitude and...
A number of forest and grassland studies indicated that stimulation of the soil respiration by soil ...
The largest terrestrial-to-atmosphere carbon flux is respired CO<sub>2</sub>. However, t...
It is not yet clear how soils are responding to a warming climate. A major study using the National ...
The net annual exchange of carbon between the atmosphere and terrestrial ecosystems is of prime impo...
The universally observed exponential increase in soil-surface CO2 efflux (‘soil respiration’; FS) wi...
Climate warming could destabilise the Earth's largest terrestrial store of reactive carbon (C), by a...
The respiratory release of carbon dioxide (CO2) from soil is a major yet poorly understood flux in t...
Pekka Vanhala, et al, 'Old soil carbon is more temperature sensitive than the young in an agricultur...
Climate warming enhances multiple ecosystem C fluxes, but the net impact of changing C fluxes on soi...
Elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration (eCO2) and climate change may substantially alter soil carbon...
International audienceThe temperature sensitivity of soil organic carbon decomposition is critical f...
Increases in global temperatures due to climate change threaten to tip the balance between carbon (C...
Partially decomposed plant and animal remains have been accumulating in organic soils (i.e.>40% C co...
Increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) concentration is both a strong driver of primary product...
Climatic warming will probably have particularly large impacts on carbon fluxes in high altitude and...
A number of forest and grassland studies indicated that stimulation of the soil respiration by soil ...
The largest terrestrial-to-atmosphere carbon flux is respired CO<sub>2</sub>. However, t...
It is not yet clear how soils are responding to a warming climate. A major study using the National ...
The net annual exchange of carbon between the atmosphere and terrestrial ecosystems is of prime impo...
The universally observed exponential increase in soil-surface CO2 efflux (‘soil respiration’; FS) wi...
Climate warming could destabilise the Earth's largest terrestrial store of reactive carbon (C), by a...
The respiratory release of carbon dioxide (CO2) from soil is a major yet poorly understood flux in t...
Pekka Vanhala, et al, 'Old soil carbon is more temperature sensitive than the young in an agricultur...
Climate warming enhances multiple ecosystem C fluxes, but the net impact of changing C fluxes on soi...
Elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration (eCO2) and climate change may substantially alter soil carbon...
International audienceThe temperature sensitivity of soil organic carbon decomposition is critical f...