On the variability of the ecosystem response to elevated atmospheric CO2 across spatial and temporal scales at the Duke Forest FACE experiment

•Novel analysis of 10 years of leaf level data at the Duke FACE site.•Leaf-level flux variability depends on meteorological and internal ecosystem variability.•Meteorological variability highly impacts fine temporal scales.•Spatial ecosystem variability impacts coarser scales.•Upscaling of leaf leve...

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Published inAgricultural and forest meteorology Vol. 232; no. C; pp. 367 - 383
Main Authors Paschalis, Athanasios, Katul, Gabriel G., Fatichi, Simone, Palmroth, Sari, Way, Danielle
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 15.01.2017
Elsevier
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Summary:•Novel analysis of 10 years of leaf level data at the Duke FACE site.•Leaf-level flux variability depends on meteorological and internal ecosystem variability.•Meteorological variability highly impacts fine temporal scales.•Spatial ecosystem variability impacts coarser scales.•Upscaling of leaf level fluxes to the ecosystem scale is non-trivial. While the significance of elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration on instantaneous leaf-level processes such as photosynthesis and transpiration is rarely disputed, its integrated effect at ecosystem level and at long-time scales remains a subject of debate. In part, the uncertainty stems from the inherent leaf-to-leaf variability in gas exchange rates. By combining 10 years of leaf gas exchange measurements collected during the Duke Forest Free Air CO2 Enrichment (FACE) experiment and three different leaf-scale stomatal conductance models, the leaf-to-leaf variability in photosynthetic and stomatal conductance properties is examined. How this variability is then reflected in ecosystem water vapor and carbon dioxide fluxes is explored by scaling up the leaf-level process to the canopy using model calculations. The main results are: (a) the space-time variability of the photosynthesis and stomatal conductance response is considerable as expected. (b) Variability of the calculated leaf level fluxes is dependent on both the meteorological drivers and differences in leaf age, position within the canopy, nitrogen and CO2 fertilization, which can be accommodated in model parameters. (c) Meteorological variability is playing the dominant role at short temporal scales while parameter variability is significant at longer temporal scales. (d) Leaf level results do not necessarily translate to similar ecosystem level responses due to indirect effects and other compensatory mechanisms related to long-term vegetation dynamics and ecosystem water balance.
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content type line 23
SC0006967; SC0011461; SC0006700
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Biological and Environmental Research (BER)
ISSN:0168-1923
1873-2240
DOI:10.1016/j.agrformet.2016.09.003