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Title: Influence of spring phenology on seasonal and annual carbon balance in two contrasting New England forests.
Authors: Richardson, Andrew D.
Hollinger, David Y.
Dail, D. Bryan
Lee, John T.
Munger, J. William
O'keefe, John
USDA, FS
Source: Tree physiology. 2009 Mar., v. 29, no. 3, p. 321-331.
NALT Subjects: phenology
spring
coniferous forests
deciduous forests
carbon dioxide
gas exchange
budbreak
growing season
length
primary productivity
climatic factors
temporal variation
statistical models
equations
carbon sequestration
New England region
Other Subjects: phenological indicators
eddy covariance
Issue Date: Mar-2009
Abstract: Spring phenology is thought to exert a major influence on the carbon (C) balance of temperate and boreal ecosystems. We investigated this hypothesis using four spring onset phenological indicators in conjunction with surface-atmosphere CO2 exchange data from the conifer-dominated Howland Forest and deciduous-dominated Harvard Forest AmeriFlux sites. All phenological measures, including CO2 source-sink transition dates, could be well predicted on the basis of a simple two-parameter spring warming model, indicating good potential for improving the representation of phenological transitions and their dynamic responsiveness to climate variability in land surface models. The date at which canopy-scale photosynthetic capacity reached a threshold value of 12 μmol m-2 s-1 was better correlated with spring and annual flux integrals than were either deciduous or coniferous bud burst dates. For all phenological indicators, earlier spring onset consistently, but not always significantly, resulted in higher gross primary productivity (GPP) and ecosystem respiration (RE) for both seasonal (spring months, April-June) and annual flux integrals. The increase in RE was less than that in GPP; depending on the phenological indicator used, a one-day advance in spring onset increased springtime net ecosystem productivity (NEP) by 2-4 g C m-2 day-1. In general, we could not detect significant differences between the two forest types in response to earlier spring, although the response to earlier spring was generally more pronounced for Harvard Forest than for Howland Forest, suggesting that future climate warming may favor deciduous species over coniferous species, at least in this region. The effect of earlier spring tended to be about twice as large when annual rather than springtime flux integrals were considered. This result is suggestive of both immediate and lagged effects of earlier spring onset on ecosystem C cycling, perhaps as a result of accelerated N cycling rates and cascading effects on N uptake, foliar N concentrations and photosynthetic capacity.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/26506
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

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