Eszter Lellei-Kovács
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
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Featured researches published by Eszter Lellei-Kovács.
Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2009
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.
Global Change Biology | 2016
Marc Estiarte; Sara Vicca; Josep Peñuelas; Michael Bahn; Claus Beier; Bridget A. Emmett; Philip A. Fay; Paul J. Hanson; Roland Hasibeder; Jaime Kigel; György Kröel-Dulay; Klaus Steenberg Larsen; Eszter Lellei-Kovács; Jean-Marc Limousin; Romà Ogaya; Jean Marc Ourcival; Sabine Reinsch; Osvaldo E. Sala; Inger Kappel Schmidt; Marcelo Sternberg; Katja Tielbörger; A. Tietema; Ivan A. Janssens
Well-defined productivity-precipitation relationships of ecosystems are needed as benchmarks for the validation of land models used for future projections. The productivity-precipitation relationship may be studied in two ways: the spatial approach relates differences in productivity to those in precipitation among sites along a precipitation gradient (the spatial fit, with a steeper slope); the temporal approach relates interannual productivity changes to variation in precipitation within sites (the temporal fits, with flatter slopes). Precipitation-reduction experiments in natural ecosystems represent a complement to the fits, because they can reduce precipitation below the natural range and are thus well suited to study potential effects of climate drying. Here, we analyse the effects of dry treatments in eleven multiyear precipitation-manipulation experiments, focusing on changes in the temporal fit. We expected that structural changes in the dry treatments would occur in some experiments, thereby reducing the intercept of the temporal fit and displacing the productivity-precipitation relationship downward the spatial fit. The majority of experiments (72%) showed that dry treatments did not alter the temporal fit. This implies that current temporal fits are to be preferred over the spatial fit to benchmark land-model projections of productivity under future climate within the precipitation ranges covered by the experiments. Moreover, in two experiments, the intercept of the temporal fit unexpectedly increased due to mechanisms that reduced either water loss or nutrient loss. The expected decrease of the intercept was observed in only one experiment, and only when distinguishing between the late and the early phases of the experiment. This implies that we currently do not know at which precipitation-reduction level or at which experimental duration structural changes will start to alter ecosystem productivity. Our study highlights the need for experiments with multiple, including more extreme, dry treatments, to identify the precipitation boundaries within which the current temporal fits remain valid.
Ecosystems | 2016
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.
Cereal Research Communications | 2008
Eszter Lellei-Kovács; Tibor Kalapos
Oil rape is a valuable fodder because in early spring and late autumn it produces green forage used for the nutrition of domestic animals. It has been replacing sunflower and soy in colder and wetter regions. It is additionally advantageous because it leaves behind more nitrogen in soil, which is beneficial to other plants in plant rotation. There are some possible ways for the fixation of nitrogen in soil and they are as follows: by the means of oil rape straw ; by relatively long roots ; by the action of nitrogen bacteria, which perform the nitrogen synthesis within their root system, which is the case in some leguminous plants. Oil seed rape is expected to be wider used in crop rotation of West and Middle Europe, Croatia included. Due to this various sorts have been introduced and potential positive impacts have been studied in order to boost the process. This paper presents information on barley and wheat yield in case when they were sown after oil seed rape and corn. The aim of the research is to determine the presence of positive impacts upon the soil with special attention paid to a potential increase of nitrogen content after oil seed rape was grown. The preceding crops had statistically significant effect. Rape yield was significantly higher compared to the one with corn as preceding crops. Very similar results were obtained in 2007.The maize hybrids seed from three different FAO groups (FAO 400, FAO 500 and FAO 600) in four fractions (KO, KP, SO and SP) produced in two climatically different years (extremely dry 2000 and extremely wet 2001) had been different in quality and chemical composition. The effects of year, genetic specifity and seed fraction at the kernel mass, chemical composition (starch, proteins, cellulose, oil and moisture content) and seed vigour have been evaluated. The influence of agroecological conditions during two production years have been exposed at seed chemical composition and vigour indicators (cold test – CT and bulk seed electrical conductivity - EC). The genetic specificity and seed fraction had significant influence at all tested indices, with the exception of the influence of the fraction at the starch content
Scientific Reports | 2017
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.
European Journal of Soil Biology | 2011
Eszter Lellei-Kovács; Edit Kovács-Láng; Zoltán Botta-Dukát; Tibor Kalapos; Bridget A. Emmett; Claus Beier
Biogeosciences | 2014
Sara Vicca; Michael Bahn; Marc Estiarte; E.E. van Loon; Rodrigo Vargas; Gloria Alberti; Per Ambus; M. A. Arain; Claus Beier; L. P. Bentley; Werner Borken; Nina Buchmann; Scott L. Collins; G. de Dato; Jeffrey S. Dukes; C. Escolar; Philip A. Fay; Gabriele Guidolotti; Paul J. Hanson; Ansgar Kahmen; György Kröel-Dulay; Thomas Ladreiter-Knauss; Klaus Steenberg Larsen; Eszter Lellei-Kovács; E. Lebrija-Trejos; Fernando T. Maestre; Sven Marhan; Miles R. Marshall; Patrick Meir; Y. Miao
Community Ecology | 2008
Eszter Lellei-Kovács; Edit Kovács-Láng; Tibor Kalapos; Zoltán Botta-Dukát; S. Barabas; Claus Beier
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2016
Renáta Sándor; Zoltán Barcza; Dóra Hidy; Eszter Lellei-Kovács; Shaoxiu Ma; Gianni Bellocchi
European Journal of Agronomy | 2017
Renáta Sándor; Zoltán Barcza; Marco Acutis; Luca Doro; Dóra Hidy; Martin Köchy; Julien Minet; Eszter Lellei-Kovács; S. Ma; Alessia Perego; Susanne Rolinski; Françoise Ruget; Mattia Sanna; Giovanna Seddaiu; Lianhai Wu; Gianni Bellocchi