Soil respiration constitutes the second largest flux of carbon (C) between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere. This study provides a synthesis of soil respiration (R s ) in 20 European grasslands across a climatic transect, including ten meadows, eight pastures and two unmanaged grasslands. Maximum rates of R s (R s max ), R s at a reference soil temperature (10°C; R s 10 ) and annual R s (estimated for 13 sites) ranged from 1.9 to 15.9 μmol CO 2 m −2 s −1 , 0.3 to 5.5 μmol CO 2 m −2 s −1 and 58 to 1988 g C m −2 y −1 , respectively. Values obtained for Central European mountain meadows are amongst the highest so far reported for any type of ecosystem. Across all sites R s max was closely related to R s 10 .Assimilate supply affected R s at timescales from daily (but not necessarily diurnal) to annual.Reductions of assimilate supply by removal of aboveground biomass through grazing and cutting resulted in a rapid and a significant decrease of R s . Temperature-independent seasonal fluctuations of R s of an intensively managed pasture were closely related to changes in leaf area index (LAI). Across sites R s 10 increased with mean annual soil temperature (MAT), LAI and gross primary productivity (GPP), indicating that assimilate supply overrides potential acclimation to prevailing temperatures. Also annual R s was closely related to LAI and GPP. Because the latter two parameters were coupled to MAT, temperature was a suitable surrogate for deriving estimates of annual R s across the grasslands studied. These findings contribute to our understanding of regional patterns of soil C fluxes and highlight the importance of assimilate supply for soil CO 2 emissions at various timescales.
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