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Partial asynchrony of coniferous forest carbon sources and sinks at the intra-annual time scale

Authors :
Roberto Silvestro
Maurizio Mencuccini
Raúl García-Valdés
Serena Antonucci
Alberto Arzac
Franco Biondi
Valentina Buttò
J. Julio Camarero
Filipe Campelo
Hervé Cochard
Katarina Čufar
Henri E. Cuny
Martin de Luis
Annie Deslauriers
Guillaume Drolet
Marina V. Fonti
Patrick Fonti
Alessio Giovannelli
Jožica Gričar
Andreas Gruber
Vladimír Gryc
Rossella Guerrieri
Aylin Güney
Xiali Guo
Jian-Guo Huang
Tuula Jyske
Jakub Kašpar
Alexander V. Kirdyanov
Tamir Klein
Audrey Lemay
Xiaoxia Li
Eryuan Liang
Anna Lintunen
Feng Liu
Fabio Lombardi
Qianqian Ma
Harri Mäkinen
Rayees A. Malik
Edurne Martinez del Castillo
Jordi Martinez-Vilalta
Stefan Mayr
Hubert Morin
Cristina Nabais
Pekka Nöjd
Walter Oberhuber
José M. Olano
Andrew P. Ouimette
Teemu V. S. Paljakka
Mikko Peltoniemi
Richard L. Peters
Ping Ren
Peter Prislan
Cyrille B. K. Rathgeber
Anna Sala
Antonio Saracino
Luigi Saulino
Piia Schiestl-Aalto
Vladimir V. Shishov
Alexia Stokes
Raman Sukumar
Jean-Daniel Sylvain
Roberto Tognetti
Václav Treml
Josef Urban
Hanuš Vavrčík
Joana Vieira
Georg von Arx
Yan Wang
Bao Yang
Qiao Zeng
Shaokang Zhang
Emanuele Ziaco
Sergio Rossi
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 15, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2024.

Abstract

Abstract As major terrestrial carbon sinks, forests play an important role in mitigating climate change. The relationship between the seasonal uptake of carbon and its allocation to woody biomass remains poorly understood, leaving a significant gap in our capacity to predict carbon sequestration by forests. Here, we compare the intra-annual dynamics of carbon fluxes and wood formation across the Northern hemisphere, from carbon assimilation and the formation of non-structural carbon compounds to their incorporation in woody tissues. We show temporally coupled seasonal peaks of carbon assimilation (GPP) and wood cell differentiation, while the two processes are substantially decoupled during off-peak periods. Peaks of cambial activity occur substantially earlier compared to GPP, suggesting the buffer role of non-structural carbohydrates between the processes of carbon assimilation and allocation to wood. Our findings suggest that high-resolution seasonal data of ecosystem carbon fluxes, wood formation and the associated physiological processes may reduce uncertainties in carbon source-sink relationships at different spatial scales, from stand to ecosystem levels.

Subjects

Subjects :
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Nature Communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.9eeab10ed804aef9156d9089d14491a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49494-5