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Carbon-nitrogen interactions in European forests and semi-natural vegetation - Part 2: Untangling climatic, edaphic, management and nitrogen deposition effects on carbon sequestration potentials
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- "The effects of atmospheric nitrogen deposition (N-dep) on carbon (C) sequestration in forests have often been assessed by relating differences in productivity to spatial variations of N-dep across a large geographic domain. These correlations generally suffer from covariation of other confounding variables related to climate and other growth-limiting factors, as well as large uncertainties in total (dry + wet) reactive nitrogen (N-r) deposition. We propose a methodology for untangling the effects of N-dep from those of meteorological variables, soil water retention capacity and stand age, using a mechanistic forest growth model in combination with eddy covariance CO2 exchange fluxes from a Europe-wide network of 22 forest flux towers. Total N-r deposition rates were estimated from local measurements as far as possible. The forest data were compared with data from natural or semi-natural, non-woody vegetation sites. The response of forest net ecosystem productivity to nitrogen deposition (dNEP/dN(dep)) was estimated after accounting for the effects on gross primary productivity (GPP) of the co-correlates by means of a meta-modelling standardization procedure, which resulted in a reduction by a factor of about 2 of the uncorrected, apparent dGPP/dN(dep) value. This model-enhanced analysis of the C and N-dep flux observations at the scale of the European network suggests a mean overall dNEP/dN(dep) response of forest lifetime C sequestration to N-dep of the order of 40-50 g C per g N, which is slightly larger but not significantly different from the range of estimates published in the most recent reviews. Importantly, patterns of gross primary and net ecosystem productivity versus N-dep were non-linear, with no further growth responses at high N-dep levels (N-dep > 2.5-3 gNm(-2) yr(-1)) but accompanied by increasingly large ecosystem N losses by leaching and gaseous emissions. The reduced increase in productivity per unit N deposited at high N-dep levels implies that
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Notes :
- The authors gratefully acknowledge financialsupport by the European Commission through the two FP6 in-tegrated projects CarboEurope-IP (project no. GOCE-CT-2003-505572) and NitroEurope Integrated Project (project no. 017841),the FP7 ECLAIRE project (grant agreement no. 282910), and theABBA COST Action ES0804. We are also thankful for fundingfrom the French GIP-ECOFOR consortium under the F-ORE-T for-est observation and experimentation network, as well as from theMDM-2017-0714 Spanish grant. We are grateful to Janne Korho-nen, Mari Pihlatie and Dave Simpson for their comments on the pa-per. Finalization of the paper was supported by the UK Natural En-vironment Research Council award number NE/R016429/1 as partof the UK-SCAPE programme delivering national capability. Wealso wish to thank two anonymous referees for their constructivecriticism of the paper., English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1390906912
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource