Non-growing season soil greenhouse gas emission may play an important role in the forest ecosystem carbon and nitrogen cycle. However, it is not clear about the effects of the cutting distur-bance on soil greenhouse gas emissions during non-growing season. The CO, CH and NO fluxes and related environmental factors (soil temperature, water content, carbon and nitrogen, etc.) were monitored in the Korean pine plantation (fifty year-old) under different light-felling manners (control, no cutting; the half light-felling, cutting 50% of broad-leaved trees in canopy; the whole light-felling, cutting 100% of broad-leaved trees in canopy), using static chamber technique and gas chromatography during non-growing season in Maoer Mountains of China. The main aim was to reveal the influence of cutting disturbance on soil greenhouse gases emission during non-growing season and its controlling factors. The results showed that the whole and half light-felling manners significantly decreased COemission flux by 21.0% and 22.8%, and NO by 23.5% and 11.2%, and decreased CHuptake by 16.0% and 16.4%. The contribution of non-growing season CO, CH and NO emission to annual total was 11.7%-14.2%, 13.1%-17.0% and 63.9%-72.6%, respectively. Light-felling manners decreased annual cumulative contribution of CO by 1.4%-2.5%, that of CH by 0.7%-3.9%, but increased that of NO by 2.4%-8.7%. Furthermore, light-felling increased the correlations of soil CO fluxes with soil temperature, soil water content, nitrate and ammonium, and decreased its correlation with soil organic carbon content. Light-felling increased the correlations of soil CH flux with soil water content, soil pH, soil organic carbon, ammonium, and decreased its correlation with nitrate. Light-felling increased the correlations between soil NO flux and soil temperature, decreased the correlations with nitrate and ammonium, and changed the positive correlation with soil pH to negative. Therefore, light-felling had significant effects on the emission fluxes of the greenhouse gas during non-growing season, with the whole light-felling decreased more soil NO emission flux than the half light-felling.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.13287/j.1001-9332.201807.028DOI Listing

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