ChristopherOishi A, Miniat Chelcy F, Novick Kimberly A, Brantley Steven T, Vose James M, Walker John T
USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station, Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory, 3160 Coweeta Lab Road, Otto, NC 28763, USA.
School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University - Bloomington, 702 N. Walnut Grove Avenue, Bloomington, IN 47405, USA.
Agric For Meteorol. 2018;252:269-282. doi: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2018.01.011.
Increasing air temperature is expected to extend growing season length in temperate, broadleaf forests, leading to potential increases in evapotranspiration and net carbon uptake. However, other key processes affecting water and carbon cycles are also highly temperature-dependent. Warmer temperatures may result in higher ecosystem carbon loss through respiration and higher potential evapotranspiration through increased atmospheric demand for water. Thus, the net effects of a warming planet are uncertain and highly dependent on local climate and vegetation. We analyzed five years of data from the Coweeta eddy covariance tower in the southern Appalachian Mountains of western North Carolina, USA, a highly productive region that has historically been underrepresented in flux observation networks. We examined how leaf phenology and climate affect water and carbon cycling in a mature forest in one of the wettest biomes in North America. Warm temperatures in early 2012 caused leaf-out to occur two weeks earlier than in cooler years and led to higher seasonal carbon uptake. However, these warmer temperatures also drove higher winter ecosystem respiration, offsetting much of the springtime carbon gain. Interannual variability in net carbon uptake was high (147 to 364 g C m y), but unrelated to growing season length. Instead, years with warmer growing seasons had 10% higher respiration and sequestered ~40% less carbon than cooler years. In contrast, annual evapotranspiration was relatively consistent among years (coefficient of variation = 4%) despite large differences in precipitation (17%, range = 800 mm). Transpiration by the evergreen understory likely helped to compensate for phenologically-driven differences in canopy transpiration. The increasing frequency of high summer temperatures is expected to have a greater effect on respiration than growing season length, reducing forest carbon storage.
预计气温升高将延长温带阔叶林的生长季节长度,从而可能导致蒸散量和净碳吸收量增加。然而,影响水分和碳循环的其他关键过程也高度依赖温度。温度升高可能导致生态系统通过呼吸作用损失更多碳,并因大气对水的需求增加而使潜在蒸散量增加。因此,全球变暖的净效应尚不确定,且高度依赖于当地气候和植被。我们分析了美国北卡罗来纳州西部阿巴拉契亚山脉南部科韦塔涡度协方差塔的五年数据,该地区生产力很高,但在通量观测网络中一直未得到充分体现。我们研究了叶物候和气候如何影响北美最湿润生物群落之一中一片成熟森林的水分和碳循环。2012年初的温暖气温使树叶长出时间比凉爽年份提前了两周,并导致季节性碳吸收量增加。然而,这些较高的温度也促使冬季生态系统呼吸作用增强,抵消了春季大部分的碳增量。净碳吸收的年际变化很大(147至364克碳/平方米/年),但与生长季节长度无关。相反,生长季节较温暖的年份呼吸作用高出10%,碳固存比凉爽年份少约40%。相比之下,尽管降水量差异很大(17%,范围为800毫米),但年蒸散量在各年份之间相对一致(变异系数 = 4%)。常绿林下植被的蒸腾作用可能有助于弥补冠层蒸腾作用在物候上的差异。预计夏季高温频率增加对呼吸作用的影响将大于生长季节长度的影响,从而减少森林碳储量。