Data-based perfect-deficit approach to understanding climate extremes and forest carbon assimilation capacity

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Suhua Wei - , City University of New York (Author)
  • Chuixiang Yi - , City University of New York (Author)
  • George Hendrey - , City University of New York (Author)
  • Timothy Eaton - , City University of New York (Author)
  • Gerald Rustic - , City University of New York (Author)
  • Shaoqiang Wang - , CAS - Institute of Geographical Sciences and Natural Resources Research (Author)
  • Heping Liu - , Washington State University Pullman (Author)
  • Nir Y. Krakauer - , City University of New York (Author)
  • Weiguo Wang - , National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Author)
  • Ankur R. Desai - , University of Wisconsin-Madison (Author)
  • Leonardo Montagnani - , Free University of Bozen-Bolzano (Author)
  • Kyaw Tha Paw U - , University of California at Davis (Author)
  • Matthias Falk - , University of California at Davis (Author)
  • Andrew Black - , University of British Columbia (Author)
  • Christian Bernhofer - , Chair of Meteorology (Author)
  • Thomas Grünwald - , Chair of Meteorology, Chair of Meteorology (Author)
  • Tuomas Laurila - , Finnish Meteorological Institute (Author)
  • Alessandro Cescatti - , European Commission Joint Research Centre Institute (Author)
  • Eddy Moors - , Wageningen University & Research (WUR) (Author)
  • Rosvel Bracho - , University of Florida (Author)
  • Riccardo Valentini - , Tuscia University (Author)

Abstract

Several lines of evidence suggest that the warming climate plays a vital role in driving certain types of extreme weather. The impact of warming and of extreme weather on forest carbon assimilation capacity is poorly known. Filling this knowledge gap is critical towards understanding the amount of carbon that forests can hold. Here, we used a perfect-deficit approach to identify forest canopy photosynthetic capacity (CPC) deficits and analyze how they correlate to climate extremes, based on observational data measured by the eddy covariance method at 27 forest sites over 146 site-years. We found that droughts severely affect the carbon assimilation capacities of evergreen broadleaf forest (EBF) and deciduous broadleaf forest. The carbon assimilation capacities of Mediterranean forests were highly sensitive to climate extremes, while marine forest climates tended to be insensitive to climate extremes. Our estimates suggest an average global reduction of forest CPC due to unfavorable climate extremes of 6.3 Pg C (∼5.2% of global gross primary production) per growing season over 2001-2010, with EBFs contributing 52% of the total reduction.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number065002
JournalEnvironmental Research Letters
Volume9
Issue number6
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2014
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 84903625163
ORCID /0000-0003-2263-0073/work/164619475

Keywords

Keywords

  • carbon assimilation capacity, climate extremes, drought, perfect-deficit approach, forests