Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zurich (Swiss Federal Institute of Technology), Zurich, Switzerland.
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Glob Chang Biol. 2022 Nov;28(21):6115-6134. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16351. Epub 2022 Sep 7.
The degree to which elevated CO concentrations (e[CO ]) increase the amount of carbon (C) assimilated by vegetation plays a key role in climate change. However, due to the short-term nature of CO enrichment experiments and the lack of reconciliation between different ecological scales, the effect of e[CO ] on plant biomass stocks remains a major uncertainty in future climate projections. Here, we review the effect of e[CO ] on plant biomass across multiple levels of ecological organization, scaling from physiological responses to changes in population-, community-, ecosystem-, and global-scale dynamics. We find that evidence for a sustained biomass response to e[CO ] varies across ecological scales, leading to diverging conclusions about the responses of individuals, populations, communities, and ecosystems. While the distinct focus of every scale reveals new mechanisms driving biomass accumulation under e[CO ], none of them provides a full picture of all relevant processes. For example, while physiological evidence suggests a possible long-term basis for increased biomass accumulation under e[CO ] through sustained photosynthetic stimulation, population-scale evidence indicates that a possible e[CO ]-induced increase in mortality rates might potentially outweigh the effect of increases in plant growth rates on biomass levels. Evidence at the global scale may indicate that e[CO ] has contributed to increased biomass cover over recent decades, but due to the difficulty to disentangle the effect of e[CO ] from a variety of climatic and land-use-related drivers of plant biomass stocks, it remains unclear whether nutrient limitations or other ecological mechanisms operating at finer scales will dampen the e[CO ] effect over time. By exploring these discrepancies, we identify key research gaps in our understanding of the effect of e[CO ] on plant biomass and highlight the need to integrate knowledge across scales of ecological organization so that large-scale modeling can represent the finer-scale mechanisms needed to constrain our understanding of future terrestrial C storage.
大气中 CO 浓度升高(e[CO ])在多大程度上增加植被同化的碳量(C)在气候变化中起着关键作用。然而,由于 CO 富集实验的短期性质以及不同生态尺度之间缺乏协调,e[CO ]对植物生物量储量的影响仍然是未来气候预测中的一个主要不确定因素。在这里,我们回顾了 e[CO ]对植物生物量的影响,跨越了多个生态组织层次,从生理响应到种群、群落、生态系统和全球尺度动态的变化。我们发现,证据表明 e[CO ]对生物量的持续响应在生态尺度上存在差异,导致对个体、种群、群落和生态系统的响应得出了不同的结论。虽然每个尺度的独特焦点揭示了在 e[CO ]下驱动生物量积累的新机制,但它们都没有提供所有相关过程的全貌。例如,虽然生理证据表明,通过持续的光合作用刺激,e[CO ]下可能有一个长期的基础来增加生物量积累,但种群尺度的证据表明,e[CO ]诱导的死亡率增加可能超过植物生长速率增加对生物量水平的影响。全球尺度的证据可能表明,e[CO ]导致了近几十年来生物量覆盖的增加,但由于难以将 e[CO ]的影响与植物生物量储量的各种气候和土地利用相关驱动因素分开,因此仍不清楚养分限制或其他在更细尺度上起作用的生态机制是否会随着时间的推移而减弱 e[CO ]的影响。通过探讨这些差异,我们确定了我们对 e[CO ]对植物生物量影响的理解中的关键研究差距,并强调需要整合生态组织层次的知识,以便大规模建模能够代表约束我们对未来陆地 C 储存理解所需的更细尺度机制。