Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08542, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2012 Feb 28;109(9):3406-11. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1121448109. Epub 2012 Feb 13.
Climate exerts a powerful influence on biological processes, but the effects of climate change on ecosystem nutrient flux and cycling are poorly resolved. Although rare, long-term records offer a unique opportunity to disentangle effects of climate from other anthropogenic influences. Here, we examine the longest and most complete record of watershed nutrient and climate dynamics available worldwide, which was collected at the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in the northeastern United States. We used empirical analyses and model calculations to distinguish between effects of climate change and past perturbations on the forest nitrogen (N) cycle. We find that climate alone cannot explain the occurrence of a dramatic >90% drop in watershed nitrate export over the past 46 y, despite longer growing seasons and higher soil temperatures. The strongest climate influence was an increase in soil temperature accompanied by a shift in paths of soil water flow within the watershed, but this effect explained, at best, only ∼40% of the nitrate decline. In contrast, at least 50-60% of the observed change in the N export could be explained by the long-lasting effect of forest cutting in the early 1900s on the N cycle of the soil and vegetation pools. Our analysis shows that historic events can obscure the influence of modern day stresses on the N cycle, even when analyses have the advantage of being informed by 0.5-century-long datasets. These findings raise fundamental questions about interpretations of long-term trends as a baseline for understanding how climate change influences complex ecosystems.
气候对生物过程有强大的影响,但气候变化对生态系统养分通量和循环的影响还不清楚。尽管罕见,但长期记录提供了一个独特的机会,可以将气候的影响与其他人为因素区分开来。在这里,我们研究了全球范围内可用的最长和最完整的流域养分和气候动态记录,该记录是在美国东北部的哈伯德布鲁克实验森林收集的。我们使用实证分析和模型计算来区分气候变化和过去对森林氮(N)循环的干扰的影响。我们发现,尽管生长季节更长,土壤温度更高,但仅气候本身并不能解释过去 46 年来流域硝酸盐出口量急剧下降超过 90%的情况。最强的气候影响是土壤温度的升高伴随着流域内土壤水流路径的转变,但这种影响最多只能解释硝酸盐下降的约 40%。相比之下,至少 50-60%的观测到的 N 输出变化可以用 20 世纪初森林砍伐对土壤和植被库中 N 循环的长期影响来解释。我们的分析表明,即使分析具有长达 0.5 世纪的数据支持的优势,历史事件也可能掩盖现代压力对 N 循环的影响。这些发现对长期趋势作为理解气候变化如何影响复杂生态系统的基线的解释提出了根本性的问题。