Y Peng, SC Thomas, D Tian - Environmental Reviews, 2008 - cdnsciencepub.com
It is recognized that human activities, such as fossil fuel burning, land-use change, and forest harvesting at a large scale, have resulted in the increase of greenhouse gases in the …
ECA Davidson, E Belk, RD Boone - Global change biology, 1998 - Wiley Online Library
Variation in soil temperature can account for most of the seasonal and diel variation in soil CO2 efflux, but the temperature effect is not always consistent, and other factors such as soil …
KA Smith, T Ball, F Conen, KE Dobbie… - European journal of …, 2018 - Wiley Online Library
This review examines the interactions between soil physical factors and the biological processes responsible for the production and consumption in soils of greenhouse gases …
The global environment is constantly changing and our planet is getting warmer at an unprecedented rate. The study of the carbon cycle, and soil respiration, is a very active area …
Respiration, which is the second most important carbon flux in ecosystems following gross primary productivity, is typically represented in biogeochemical models by simple …
Carbon exchange between the terrestrial biosphere and the atmosphere is one of the key processes that need to be assessed in the context of the Kyoto Protocol. Several studies …
Forest biomes are major reserves for terrestrial carbon, and major components of global primary productivity. The carbon balance of forests is determined by a number of component …
The effect of soil water content on efflux of CO 2 from soils has been described by linear, logarithmic, quadratic, and parabolic functions of soil water expressed as matric potential …