Trends of carbon fluxes and climate over a mixed temperate–boreal transition forest in southern Ontario, Canada
Highlights
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- Annual NEP over mixed mature forest increased over 17 year period.
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- Interannual variations and trends in NEP influenced by PAR and soil temperature.
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- Seasonal CO2 budget influenced by PAR, air temperature, and soil temperature.
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- NEP increased with length of carbon uptake period.
Abstract
The exchanges of carbon dioxide (CO2),
water vapor, and energy were measured nearly continuously since 1996
over a mixed mature transition forest at the Borden Forest Research
Station, in southern Ontario, Canada. Borden Forest, one of the longest
running flux towers in North America, is located in the temperate–boreal
ecotone. This transitional region, which includes species close to the
limits of their environmental range, may be particularly susceptible to
changes in forest composition as a result of climate change. Here we
analyze net CO2 exchange, measured using the eddy covariance
method, and concurrent meteorological variables. The forest was found to
be a low-to-moderate CO2 sink, with uptake of 177 ± 28 gC m−2 yr−1 (mean ± standard error). In two of the years, however, the forest was a weak CO2 source (i.e., 1996: −36 gC m−2 yr−1 and 2001: −35 gC m−2 yr−1),
demonstrating that the forest can switch between source and sink. Over
the 17 years of measurement, annual net ecosystem productivity (NEP)
increased by 15.7 gC m−2 yr−1 yr−1, due to a decline in ecosystem respiration of 4.2 gC m−2 yr−1 yr−1 and an increase in gross ecosystem productivity of 11.6 gC m−2 yr−1 yr−1. There were notable long-term indications of climatic warming: annual air temperature rose by 0.09 °C yr−1, while soil temperature increased by 0.08 °C yr−1.
Photosynthetically active radiation and soil temperature were found to
be the dominant environmental drivers of interannual variations and
long-term trends in NEP; on seasonal or monthly time-scales, air
temperature and precipitation also influenced CO2 uptake. NEP
is positively correlated with the length of the net carbon uptake
period, which varied from 111 to 164 days. The large interannual
variations in CO2 flux in this dataset demonstrate the need for long time series of CO2,
water vapor, and energy fluxes, together with meteorological
measurements; such measurements show long-term trends, which can be used
to understand and predict future changes in forest-atmosphere exchanges
in response to anticipated changes in climate.
Keywords
- Net ecosystem productivity;
- Gross ecosystem productivity;
- Ecosystem respiration;
- Eddy covariance;
- Mixed forest;
- Long-term change
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