Unravelling the main mechanism responsible for nocturnal CO2 uptake by dryland soils
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Kim, Minsu; López Canfín, Clément; Lázaro, Roberto; Pérez Sánchez-Cañete, Enrique; Weber, BettinaEditorial
Elsevier
Date
2024-03-17Referencia bibliográfica
Kim, Minsu, et al. Unravelling the main mechanism responsible for nocturnal CO2 uptake by dryland soils. Science of the Total Environment 926 (2024) 171751 [10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.171751]
Patrocinador
Swiss National Science Foundation [grant number P400P2_191119]; Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness through projects DINCOS (CGL2016-78075-P) and INTEGRATYON3 (PID2020-117825GB-C21 & C22); ICAERSA (P18-RT-3629) and MORADO (C-EXP-366-UGR23) of the Andalusian Regional Government including European Union ERDF funds; “Margarita Salas” grant founded by the European Union – NextGenerationEU and the Spanish Ministry of Universities through the University of Granada; OASIS project funded by European Union’s Horizon research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No 101109110; University of GrazRésumé
Soil respiration, or CO2 efflux from soil, is a crucial component of the terrestrial carbon cycle in climate models.
Contrastingly, many dryland soils absorb atmospheric CO2 at night, but the exact mechanisms driving this uptake
are actively debated. Here we used a mechanistic model with heuristic approaches to unravel the underlying
processes of the observed patterns of soil-atmosphere CO2 fluxes. We show that the temperature drop during
nighttime is the main driver of CO2 uptake by increasing CO2 solubility and local water pH of a thin water film on
soil particle surfaces, providing favourable conditions for carbonate precipitation. Our data demonstrate that the
nocturnal inorganic carbon absorption is a common soil process, but often offset by biological CO2 production.
The uptake rates can be impacted by different successional stages of biocrusts that consume or produce CO2 and modify the pH of the soil water film, which can be maintained by non-rainfall water inputs, such as pore space
condensation. Annual estimates of nocturnal carbon uptake, based on in situ continuous measurements at the soil
level in drylands are still very scarce, but fluxes of up to several tens of g C m-2 y-1 have been reported,
potentially accounting for a considerable fraction of the global residual terrestrial carbon sink.