Seasonal soil respiration patterns reveal climate change impact on ecosystems.
Seasonal changes in respiration were studied in four different reconstructed soils in a barren gravel land. The respiration rates were highest in summer and lowest in winter, with heterotrophic respiration contributing more than autotrophic respiration. The respiration rates correlated more strongly with temperature than with water content, peaking in summer and winter. The respiration rates followed an exponential and power-exponential function in response to hydrothermal factors.