森林土壌の窒素ガス損失と温暖化の関係を定量化(New Study Quantifies Warming Response of Soil Gaseous Nitrogen Losses in Temperate Forest)

2025-11-27 中国科学院(CAS)

Chinese Academy of Sciences(CAS)とUniversity of California, Riversideの研究チームは、東北中国にある世界最大級の森林温暖化実験場であるQingyuan Forest Warming Experimentにおいて、温暖化が森林土壌から放出される気体状窒素(NO、N₂O、N₂)の損失に与える影響を長期間にわたり調査した。これまで、多くの気候モデルは温暖化によって窒素循環が活発化し、土壌からの気体窒素放出が増えると予想してきたが、実地データは限定的でNO と N₂O に注目したものがほとんどなかった。研究では、6年にわたって20万件以上の自動かつリアルタイムなガス測定を実施。その結果、予想に反し、地表気温が2℃上昇した場合、土壌からの年間 NO 放出量は約19%、N₂O 放出量は約16% 減少した。原因として、温暖化による土壌の乾燥が、窒素をガス化する微生物反応を抑制した可能性が示された。本結果は、多くの生態系および気候モデルが依拠する実験室データに基づく温度感応性パラメータ(Q₁₀)に対する実地での大きな疑問を投げかけ、今後の生態系モデルと気候予測における窒素循環の再評価を促すものである。

<関連情報>

気候温暖化により温帯林の土壌ガス窒素損失が減少 Climate warming reduces soil gaseous nitrogen losses in a temperate forest

Kai Huang, Di Wu, Dongwei Liu, +19 , and Yunting Fang
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  Published:November 24, 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2513401122

森林土壌の窒素ガス損失と温暖化の関係を定量化(New Study Quantifies Warming Response of Soil Gaseous Nitrogen Losses in Temperate Forest)

Significance

Climate models project that under future warming scenarios, ecosystems will lose nitrogen (N) because of accelerated cycling and increased gaseous N losses. However, these projections are predominantly derived from laboratory experiments that may not accurately represent field conditions. Opposite to these projections, our 6-y field warming experiment revealed soil N emissions were suppressed under warming, an observation shared across other warming experiments receiving less than 1,000 mm of yearly precipitation. This reduction in soil N emissions was mechanistically linked to lower microbial processing of N as soil moisture decreased under warming. Our results underscore how warming-induced losses in soil moisture can offset expected temperature effects on soil N cycling as the planet warms.

Abstract

Global warming is projected to accelerate ecosystem nitrogen (N) loss via gaseous pathways, thereby decreasing N availability, a critical nutrient for primary productivity and carbon sequestration. However, the models forecasting this ecosystem N loss are based on laboratory experiments that are inherently uncertain and have had few in situ validations. Over 6 y, we measured ~200,000 soil nitric oxide (NO; an air pollutant) and nitrous oxide (N2O; a powerful greenhouse gas) fluxes and used an upscaling approach to estimate N2 fluxes after warming a temperate forest by 2 °C. Against thermodynamic theoretical predictions, warming unequivocally lowered emissions of NO by 19% and of N2O by 16%. These lower gaseous N losses were not explained by complete reduction of NO and N2O to N2, leaching, nor plant uptake, but rather by the warming-induced drying of soils that constrained microbial activity, consistent with other warming experiments where precipitation was less than 1,000 mm y−1. Our findings challenge ecosystem model assumptions where warming, alone, accelerates N emissions and underscores how warming-induced losses in soil moisture and shortened freeze-thaw periods can offset temperature effects. Our data underscore the need for explicit consideration of in situ soil moisture when predicting changes on the terrestrial N cycle as the planet warms.

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