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Featured researches published by Keyu Fa.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Impact of Environmental Factors and Biological Soil Crust Types on Soil Respiration in a Desert Ecosystem

Wei Feng; Yuqing Zhang; Xin Jia; Bin Wu; Tianshan Zha; Shugao Qin; Ben Wang; Chenxi Shao; Jiabin Liu; Keyu Fa

The responses of soil respiration to environmental conditions have been studied extensively in various ecosystems. However, little is known about the impacts of temperature and moisture on soils respiration under biological soil crusts. In this study, CO2 efflux from biologically-crusted soils was measured continuously with an automated chamber system in Ningxia, northwest China, from June to October 2012. The highest soil respiration was observed in lichen-crusted soil (0.93±0.43 µmol m−2 s−1) and the lowest values in algae-crusted soil (0.73±0.31 µmol m−2 s−1). Over the diurnal scale, soil respiration was highest in the morning whereas soil temperature was highest in the midday, which resulted in diurnal hysteresis between the two variables. In addition, the lag time between soil respiration and soil temperature was negatively correlated with the soil volumetric water content and was reduced as soil water content increased. Over the seasonal scale, daily mean nighttime soil respiration was positively correlated with soil temperature when moisture exceeded 0.075 and 0.085 m3 m−3 in lichen- and moss-crusted soil, respectively. However, moisture did not affect on soil respiration in algae-crusted soil during the study period. Daily mean nighttime soil respiration normalized by soil temperature increased with water content in lichen- and moss-crusted soil. Our results indicated that different types of biological soil crusts could affect response of soil respiration to environmental factors. There is a need to consider the spatial distribution of different types of biological soil crusts and their relative contributions to the total C budgets at the ecosystem or landscape level.


The Scientific World Journal | 2013

Influence of Disturbance on Soil Respiration in Biologically Crusted Soil during the Dry Season

Wei Feng; Yuqing Zhang; Bin Wu; Tianshan Zha; Xin Jia; Shugao Qin; Chenxi Shao; Jiabin Liu; Zongrui Lai; Keyu Fa

Soil respiration (Rs) is a major pathway for carbon cycling and is a complex process involving abiotic and biotic factors. Biological soil crusts (BSCs) are a key biotic component of desert ecosystems worldwide. In desert ecosystems, soils are protected from surface disturbance by BSCs, but it is unknown whether Rs is affected by disturbance of this crust layer. We measured Rs in three types of disturbed and undisturbed crusted soils (algae, lichen, and moss), as well as bare land from April to August, 2010, in Mu Us desert, northwest China. Rs was similar among undisturbed soils but increased significantly in disturbed moss and algae crusted soils. The variation of Rs in undisturbed and disturbed soil was related to soil bulk density. Disturbance also led to changes in soil organic carbon and fine particles contents, including declines of 60–70% in surface soil C and N, relative to predisturbance values. Once BSCs were disturbed, Q 10 increased. Our findings indicate that a loss of BSCs cover will lead to greater soil C loss through respiration. Given these results, understanding the disturbance sensitivity impact on Rs could be helpful to modify soil management practices which promote carbon sequestration.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Abiotic CO2 uptake from the atmosphere by semiarid desert soil and its partitioning into soil phases

Jiabin Liu; Keyu Fa; Yuqing Zhang; Bin Wu; Shugao Qin; Xin Jia

Deserts may show strong downward CO2 fluxes and thus could be a significant carbon sink. However, this hypothesis has been strongly challenged because of the failure to determine both the reliability of flux measurements and the exact location of fixed carbon. In this study, we added 13CO2 to natural (unsterilized) soil in the Mu Us Desert in northern China and quantified the partitioning of added 13CO2 into soil solid and vapor phases. Results show that natural desert soil absorbed 13CO2 at a mean rate of 0.28 g m−2 d−1. Of the absorbed 13CO2, 7.1% was released over a 48 h period after 13CO2 feeding, 72.8% was stored in the soil solid phase, 0.0007% was found in the vapor phase, while 20.0% of the absorbed 13CO2 was undetected. These results indicate that undisturbed desert soils can absorb CO2 from the atmosphere, with the majority of fixed carbon conserved in the soil solid phase.


International Journal of Phytoremediation | 2015

Effect of Vegetation Rehabilitation on Soil Carbon and Its Fractions in Mu Us Desert, Northwest China

Jiabin Liu; Yuqing Zhang; Bin Wu; Shugao Qin; Xin Jia; Keyu Fa; Wei Feng; Zongrui Lai

Although vegetation rehabilitation on semi-arid and arid regions may enhance soil carbon sequestration, its effects on soil carbon fractions remain uncertain. We carried out a study after planting Artemisia ordosica (AO, 17 years), Astragalus mongolicum (AM, 5 years), and Salix psammophila (SP, 16 years) on shifting sand land (SL) in the Mu Us Desert, northwest China. We measured total soil carbon (TSC) and its components, soil inorganic carbon (SIC) and soil organic carbon (SOC), as well as the light and heavy fractions within soil organic carbon (LF-SOC and HF-SOC), under the SL and shrublands at depths of 100 cm. TSC stock under SL was 27.6 Mg ha−1, and vegetation rehabilitation remarkably elevated it by 40.6 Mgha−1, 4.5 Mgha−1, and 14.1 Mgha−1 under AO, AM and SP land, respectively. Among the newly formed TSC under the three shrublands, SIC, LF-SOC and HF-SOC accounted for 75.0%, 10.7% and 13.1% for AO, respectively; they made up 37.0%, 50.7% and 10.6% for AM, respectively; they occupied 68.6%, 18.8% and 10.0% for SP, respectively. The accumulation rates of TSC within 0–100 cm reached 238.6 g m−2y−1, 89.9 g m−2y−1 and 87.9 g m−2y−1 under AO, AM and SP land, respectively. The present study proved that the accumulation of SIC considerably contributed to soil carbon sequestration, and vegetation rehabilitation on shifting sand land has a great potential for soil carbon sequestration.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Abiotic carbonate dissolution traps carbon in a semiarid desert.

Keyu Fa; Zhen Liu; Yuqing Zhang; Shugao Qin; Bin Wu; Jiabin Liu

It is generally considered that desert ecosystems release CO2 to the atmosphere, but recent studies in drylands have shown that the soil can absorb CO2 abiotically. However, the mechanisms and exact location of abiotic carbon absorption remain unclear. Here, we used soil sterilization, 13CO2 addition, and detection methods to trace 13C in the soil of the Mu Us Desert, northern China. After 13CO2 addition, a large amount of 13CO2 was absorbed by the sterilised soil, and 13C was found enriched both in the soil gaseous phase and dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC). Further analysis indicated that about 79.45% of the total 13C absorbed by the soil was trapped in DIC, while the amount of 13C in the soil gaseous phase accounted for only 0.22% of the total absorbed 13C. However, about 20.33% of the total absorbed 13C remained undetected. Our results suggest that carbonate dissolution might occur predominately, and the soil liquid phase might trap the majority of abiotically absorbed carbon. It is possible that the trapped carbon in the soil liquid phase leaches into the groundwater; however, further studies are required to support this hypothesis.


Plant and Soil | 2017

Effects of xeric shrubs on soil microbial communities in a desert in northern China

Yanfei Sun; Yuqing Zhang; Wei Feng; Shugao Qin; Zhen Liu; Yuxuan Bai; Ru Yan; Keyu Fa

AimsThis study aimed at assessing whether patch type (i.e., under-shrub soil patch and inter-shrub soil patch) has an effect on soil microbes and how different shrub species altered the soil microbes through understanding soil microbial activity, biomass, and community structure.MethodsWe characterized the soil microbes in under-shrub and inter-shrub soil patches in three shrublands (Artemisia ordosica, Salix psammophila, and Caragana microphylla), respectively, in the Mu Us Desert, China, using microbial activity indicators, chloroform fumigation-extraction analysis, and high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing.ResultsMembers of the phyla Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, Acidobacteria, Planctomycetes, Bacteroidetes, Chloroflexi, Firmicutes, and Gemmatimonadetes were dominant. Inter-shrub soil patch differed from under-shrub soil patch in soil bacterial composition, microbial enzyme activity, and biomass, but not in diversity. Soil collected in A. ordosica shrubland exhibited the highest microbial enzyme activity, biomass, and diversity. Shrub species had significant effects on community structure, primarily the relative abundance of Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria, and Bacteroidetes.ConclusionsThe results indicated that both shrub species and patch type had effects on soil microbial communities. In shrub-dominated desert ecosystems, spatial heterogeneity of soil nutrients and moisture might not be the main factors underlying variations in bacterial diversity. The different compositions of microbial communities in various shrublands provide a foundation for further research into the mechanisms of soil organic carbon accumulation.


Forest Ecology and Management | 2016

Fine-root distribution, production, decomposition, and effect on soil organic carbon of three revegetation shrub species in northwest China

Zongrui Lai; Yuqing Zhang; Jiabin Liu; Bin Wu; Shugao Qin; Keyu Fa


Hydrological Processes | 2015

CO2 absorption of sandy soil induced by rainfall pulses in a desert ecosystem

Keyu Fa; Jiabin Liu; Yuqing Zhang; Bin Wu; Shugao Qin; Wei Feng; Zongrui Lai


Environmental Earth Sciences | 2015

Abiotic CO2 exchange between soil and atmosphere and its response to temperature

Jiabin Liu; Wei Feng; Yuqing Zhang; Xin Jia; Bin Wu; Shugao Qin; Keyu Fa; Zongrui Lai


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Patterns and possible mechanisms of soil CO2 uptake in sandy soil.

Keyu Fa; Yuqing Zhang; Bin Wu; Shugao Qin; Zhen Liu; Weiwei She

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Shugao Qin

Beijing Forestry University

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Yuqing Zhang

Beijing Forestry University

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Bin Wu

Beijing Forestry University

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Wei Feng

Beijing Forestry University

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Zongrui Lai

Beijing Forestry University

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Xin Jia

Beijing Forestry University

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Zhen Liu

Beijing Forestry University

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Yanfei Sun

Beijing Forestry University

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Ru Yan

Beijing Forestry University

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