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Dive into the research topics where Alwyn Sowerby is active.

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Featured researches published by Alwyn Sowerby.


Ecosystems | 2004

The Response of Soil Processes to Climate Change: Results from Manipulation Studies of Shrublands Across an Environmental Gradient

Bridget A. Emmett; Claus Beier; Marc Estiarte; A. Tietema; Hanne. L. Kristensen; D. Williams; Josep Peñuelas; Inger Kappel Schmidt; Alwyn Sowerby

Predicted changes in climate may affect key soil processes such as respiration and net nitrogen (N) mineralization and thus key ecosystem functions such as carbon (C) storage and nutrient availability. To identify the sensitivity of shrubland soils to predicted climate changes, we have carried out experimental manipulations involving ecosystem warming and prolonged summer drought in ericaceous shrublands across a European climate gradient. We used retractable covers to create artificial nighttime warming and prolonged summer drought to 20-m2 experimental plots. Combining the data from across the environmental gradient with the results from the manipulation experiments provides evidence for strong climate controls on soil respiration, net N mineralization and nitrification, and litter decomposition. Trends of 0%–19% increases of soil respiration in response to warming and decreases of 3%–29% in response to drought were observed. Across the environmental gradient and below soil temperatures of 20°C at a depth of 5–10 cm, a mean Q10 of 4.1 in respiration rates was observed although this varied from 2.4 to 7.0 between sites. Highest Q10 values were observed in Spain and the UK and were therefore not correlated with soil temperature. A trend of increased accumulated surface litter mass loss was observed with experimental warming (2%– 22%) but there was no consistent response to experimental drought. In contrast to soil respiration and decomposition, variability in net N mineralization was best explained by soil moisture rather than temperature. When water was neither limiting or in excess, a Q10 of 1.5 was observed for net N mineralization rates. These data suggest that key soil processes will be differentially affected by predicted changes in rainfall pattern and temperature and the net effect on ecosystem functioning will be difficult to predict without a greater understanding of the controls underlying the sensitivity of soils to climate variables.


Science of The Total Environment | 2008

Carbon and nitrogen cycles in European ecosystems respond differently to global warming

Claus Beier; Bridget A. Emmett; Josep Peñuelas; Inger Kappel Schmidt; A. Tietema; Marc Estiarte; Per Gundersen; Laura Llorens; Torben Riis-Nielsen; Alwyn Sowerby; Antonie Gorissen

The global climate is predicted to become significantly warmer over the next century. This will affect ecosystem processes and the functioning of semi natural and natural ecosystems in many parts of the world. However, as various ecosystem processes may be affected to a different extent, balances between different ecosystem processes as well as between different ecosystems may shift and lead to major unpredicted changes. In this study four European shrubland ecosystems along a north-south temperature gradient were experimentally warmed by a novel nighttime warming technique. Biogeochemical cycling of both carbon and nitrogen was affected at the colder sites with increased carbon uptake for plant growth as well as increased carbon loss through soil respiration. Carbon uptake by plant growth was more sensitive to warming than expected from the temperature response across the sites while carbon loss through soil respiration reacted to warming in agreement with the overall Q10 and response functions to temperature across the sites. Opposite to carbon, the nitrogen mineralization was relatively insensitive to the temperature increase and was mainly affected by changes in soil moisture. The results suggest that C and N cycles respond asymmetrically to warming, which may lead to progressive nitrogen limitation and thereby acclimation in plant production. This further suggests that in many temperate zones nitrogen deposition has to be accounted for, not only with respect to the impact on water quality through increased nitrogen leaching where N deposition is high, but also in predictions of carbon sequestration in terrestrial ecosystems under future climatic conditions. Finally the results indicate that on the short term the above-ground processes are more sensitive to temperature changes than the below ground processes.


Ecosystems | 2004

Climate Change Affects Carbon Allocation to the Soil in Shrublands

Antonie Gorissen; A. Tietema; Nina N. Joosten; Marc Estiarte; Josep Peñuelas; Alwyn Sowerby; Bridget A. Emmett; Claus Beier

Climate change may affect ecosystem functioning through increased temperatures or changes in precipitation patterns. Temperature and water availability are important drivers for ecosystem processes such as photosynthesis, carbon translocation, and organic matter decomposition. These climate changes may affect the supply of carbon and energy to the soil microbial population and subsequently alter decomposition and mineralization, important ecosystem processes in carbon and nutrient cycling. In this study, carried out within the cross-European research project CLIMOOR, the effect of climate change, resulting from imposed manipulations, on carbon dynamics in shrubland ecosystems was examined. We performed a 14C-labeling experiment to probe changes in net carbon uptake and allocation to the roots and soil compartments as affected by a higher temperature during the year and a drought period in the growing season. Differences in climate, soil, and plant characteristics resulted in a gradient in the severity of the drought effects on net carbon uptake by plants with the impact being most severe in Spain, followed by Denmark, with the UK showing few negative effects at significance levels of p ≤ 0.10. Drought clearly reduced carbon flow from the roots to the soil compartments. The fraction of the 14C fixed by the plants and allocated into the soluble carbon fraction in the soil and to soil microbial biomass in Denmark and the UK decreased by more than 60%. The effects of warming were not significant, but, as with the drought treatment, a negative effect on carbon allocation to soil microbial biomass was found. The changes in carbon allocation to soil microbial biomass at the northern sites in this study indicate that soil microbial biomass is a sensitive, early indicator of drought- or temperature-initiated changes in these shrubland ecosystems. The reduced supply of substrate to the soil and the response of the soil microbial biomass may help to explain the observed acclimation of CO2 exchange in other ecosystems.


Nature Communications | 2015

Increased sensitivity to climate change in disturbed ecosystems

György Kröel-Dulay; Johannes Ransijn; Inger Kappel Schmidt; Claus Beier; Paolo De Angelis; Giovanbattista de Dato; Jeffrey S. Dukes; Bridget A. Emmett; Marc Estiarte; János Garadnai; Jane Kongstad; Edit Kovács-Láng; Klaus Steenberg Larsen; Dario Liberati; Romà Ogaya; Torben Riis-Nielsen; Andrew R. Smith; Alwyn Sowerby; A. Tietema; Josep Peñuelas

Human domination of the biosphere includes changes to disturbance regimes, which push many ecosystems towards early-successional states. Ecological theory predicts that early-successional ecosystems are more sensitive to perturbations than mature systems, but little evidence supports this relationship for the perturbation of climate change. Here we show that vegetation (abundance, species richness and species composition) across seven European shrublands is quite resistant to moderate experimental warming and drought, and responsiveness is associated with the dynamic state of the ecosystem, with recently disturbed sites responding to treatments. Furthermore, most of these responses are not rapid (2-5 years) but emerge over a longer term (7-14 years). These results suggest that successional state influences the sensitivity of ecosystems to climate change, and that ecosystems recovering from disturbances may be sensitive to even modest climatic changes. A research bias towards undisturbed ecosystems might thus lead to an underestimation of the impacts of climate change.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2009

Carbon and nitrogen balances for six shrublands across Europe

Claus Beier; Bridget A. Emmett; A. Tietema; Inger Kappel Schmidt; Josep Peñuelas; Edit Kovács Láng; Pierpaolo Duce; Paolo De Angelis; Antonie Gorissen; Marc Estiarte; Giovanbattista de Dato; Alwyn Sowerby; György Kröel-Dulay; Eszter Lellei-Kovács; Olevi Kull; Pille Mänd; Henning Petersen; Peter Gjelstrup; Donatella Spano

[1] Shrublands constitute significant and important parts of European landscapes providing a large number of important ecosystem services. Biogeochemical cycles in these ecosystems have gained little attention relative to forests and grassland systems, but data on such cycles are required for developing and testing ecosystem models. As climate change progresses, the potential feedback from terrestrial ecosystems to the atmosphere through changes in carbon stocks, carbon sequestration, and general knowledge on biogeochemical cycles becomes increasingly important. Here we present carbon and nitrogen balances of six shrublands along a climatic gradient across the European continent. The aim of the study was to provide a basis for assessing the range and variability in carbon storage in European shrublands. Across the sites the net carbon storage in the systems ranged from 1,163 g C m � 2 to 18,546 g C m � 2 , and the systems ranged from being net sinks (126 g C m � 2 a � 1 ) to being net sources (� 536 g C m � 2 a � 1 ) of carbon with the largest storage and sink of carbon at wet and cold climatic conditions. The soil carbon store dominates the carbon budget at all sites and in particular at the site with a cold and wet climate where soil C constitutes 95% of the total carbon in the ecosystem. Respiration of carbon from the soil organic matter pool dominated the carbon loss at all sites while carbon loss from aboveground litter decomposition appeared less important. Total belowground carbon allocation was more than 5 times aboveground litterfall carbon which is significantly greater than the factor of 2 reported in a global analysis of forest data. Nitrogen storage was also dominated by the soil pools generally showing small losses except when atmospheric N input was high. The study shows that in the future a climate-driven land cover change between grasslands and shrublands in Europe will likely lead to increased ecosystem C where shrublands are promoted and less where grasses are promoted. However, it also emphasizes that if feedbacks on the global carbon cycle are to be predicted it is critically important to quantify and understand belowground carbon allocation and processes as well as soil carbon pools, particularly on wet organic soils, rather than plant functional change as the soil stores dominate the overall budget and fluxes of carbon.


Ecosystems | 2016

Temperature Dependence of Soil Respiration Modulated by Thresholds in Soil Water Availability Across European Shrubland Ecosystems

Eszter Lellei-Kovács; Zoltán Botta-Dukát; Giovanbattista de Dato; Marc Estiarte; Gabriele Guidolotti; G.R. Kopittke; Edit Kovács-Láng; György Kröel-Dulay; Klaus Steenberg Larsen; Josep Peñuelas; Andrew R. Smith; Alwyn Sowerby; A. Tietema; Inger Kappel Schmidt

Soil respiration (SR) is a major component of the global carbon cycle and plays a fundamental role in ecosystem feedback to climate change. Empirical modelling is an essential tool for predicting ecosystem responses to environmental change, and also provides important data for calibrating and corroborating process-based models. In this study, we evaluated the performance of three empirical temperature–SR response functions (exponential, Lloyd–Taylor and Gaussian) at seven shrublands located within three climatic regions (Atlantic, Mediterranean and Continental) across Europe. We investigated the performance of SR models by including the interaction between soil moisture and soil temperature. We found that the best fit for the temperature functions depended on the site-specific climatic conditions. Including soil moisture, we identified thresholds in the three different response functions that improved the model fit in all cases. The direct soil moisture effect on SR, however, was weak at the annual time scale. We conclude that the exponential soil temperature function may only be a good predictor for SR in a narrow temperature range, and that extrapolating predictions for future climate based on this function should be treated with caution as modelled outputs may underestimate SR. The addition of soil moisture thresholds improved the model fit at all sites, but had a far greater ecological significance in the wet Atlantic shrubland where a fundamental change in the soil CO2 efflux would likely have an impact on the whole carbon budget.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Shrubland primary production and soil respiration diverge along European climate gradient

Sabine Reinsch; Eva Koller; Alwyn Sowerby; Giovanbattista de Dato; Marc Estiarte; Gabriele Guidolotti; Edit Kovács-Láng; György Kröel-Dulay; Eszter Lellei-Kovács; Klaus Steenberg Larsen; Dario Liberati; Josep Peñuelas; Johannes Ransijn; David A. Robinson; Inger Kappel Schmidt; Andrew R. Smith; A. Tietema; Jeffrey S. Dukes; Claus Beier; Bridget A. Emmett

Above- and belowground carbon (C) stores of terrestrial ecosystems are vulnerable to environmental change. Ecosystem C balances in response to environmental changes have been quantified at individual sites, but the magnitudes and directions of these responses along environmental gradients remain uncertain. Here we show the responses of ecosystem C to 8-12 years of experimental drought and night-time warming across an aridity gradient spanning seven European shrublands using indices of C assimilation (aboveground net primary production: aNPP) and soil C efflux (soil respiration: Rs). The changes of aNPP and Rs in response to drought indicated that wet systems had an overall risk of increased loss of C but drier systems did not. Warming had no consistent effect on aNPP across the climate gradient, but suppressed Rs more at the drier sites. Our findings suggest that above- and belowground C fluxes can decouple, and provide no evidence of acclimation to environmental change at a decadal timescale. aNPP and Rs especially differed in their sensitivity to drought and warming, with belowground processes being more sensitive to environmental change.


Global Change Biology | 2012

Impacts of atmospheric nitrogen deposition: responses of multiple plant and soil parameters across contrasting ecosystems in long‐term field experiments

Gareth K. Phoenix; Bridget A. Emmett; Andrea J. Britton; Simon J.M. Caporn; Nancy B. Dise; Rachel Helliwell; Laurence Jones; Jonathan R. Leake; Ian D. Leith; Lucy J. Sheppard; Alwyn Sowerby; Michael G. Pilkington; Edwin C. Rowe; Mike Ashmore; Sally A. Power


Global Change Biology | 2007

Response of plant species richness and primary productivity in shrublands along a north–south gradient in Europe to seven years of experimental warming and drought: reductions in primary productivity in the heat and drought year of 2003

Josep Peñuelas; Patricia Prieto; Claus Beier; Carla Cesaraccio; Paolo De Angelis; Giovanbattista de Dato; Bridget A. Emmett; Marc Estiarte; János Garadnai; Antonie Gorissen; Edit Kovács Láng; György Kröel-Dulay; Laura Llorens; Grazia Pellizzaro; Torben Riis-Nielsen; Inger Kappel Schmidt; Costantino Sirca; Alwyn Sowerby; Donatella Spano; A. Tietema


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2005

Microbial community changes in heathland soil communities along a geographical gradient: interaction with climate change manipulations

Alwyn Sowerby; Bridget A. Emmett; Claus Beier; A. Tietema; Josep Peñuelas; Marc Estiarte; Maartje J.M. Van Meeteren; Steven Hughes; Chris Freeman

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Claus Beier

Norwegian Institute for Water Research

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A. Tietema

University of Amsterdam

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Josep Peñuelas

Spanish National Research Council

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Marc Estiarte

Spanish National Research Council

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György Kröel-Dulay

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Chris D. Evans

University of East Anglia

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