Soil respiration during the growing season was calculated from CO2 profiles in a heavy clay soil under native grass and on cultivated plots. Soil respiration of the native grass plots was correlated with moisture content and temperature of the surface soil. However, the correlation accounted for only ⅓ of the observed variation in soil respiration and could not explain the large difference between two growing seasons. Addition of mineral N decreased soil respiration and irrigation increased it. Total soil respiration on the cultivated plots was higher than on the native grassland. On the wheat plots, soil respiration was significantly correlated with soil moisture but not with temperature; the reverse was true for the fallowed plots. Soil respiration between 1 May and 1 September on the native grassland was highly correlated with rainfall and the number of days with rain in excess of 5 mm. It was concluded that the number of wetting and drying cycles in the soil was mainly responsible for the annual variation in soil respiration. From comparison with data on shoot production, it appears that soil respiration exceeds net production in wet years and that the opposite is true in dry years.