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AGU: Geophysical Research Letters

 

Keywords

  • eddy covariance
  • carbon-water cycle

Index Terms

  • Biogeosciences: Biogeochemical cycles, processes, and modeling
  • Biogeosciences: Biosphere/atmosphere interactions
  • Biogeosciences: Carbon cycling

Abstract

Determinants of terrestrial ecosystem carbon balance inferred from European eddy covariance flux sites

Markus Reichstein

Department of Forest Environment and Resources, DISAFRI, University of Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy

Dario Papale

Department of Forest Environment and Resources, DISAFRI, University of Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy

Riccardo Valentini

Department of Forest Environment and Resources, DISAFRI, University of Tuscia, Viterbo, Italy

Marc Aubinet

Faculté Universitaire des Sciences Agronomiques, Gembloux, Belgium

Christian Bernhofer

Department of Meteorology, Institute of Hydrology and Meteorology, Technical University of Dresden, Dresden, Germany

Alexander Knohl

Max-Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Jena, Germany

Tuomas Laurila

Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland

Anders Lindroth

Geobiosphere Science Centre, Physical Geography and Ecosystems Analysis, Lund University, Lund, Sweden

Eddy Moors

Alterra Green World Research, Wageningen, Netherlands

Kim Pilegaard

Biosystems Department, Risø National Laboratory, Roskilde, Denmark

Günther Seufert

Institute for Environment and Sustainability, European Commission Joint Research Center, Ispra, Italy

Pioneering work in the last century has resulted in a widely accepted paradigm that primary production is strongly positively related to temperature and water availability such that the northern hemispheric forest carbon sink may increase under conditions of global warming. However, the terrestrial carbon sink at the ecosystem level (i.e. net ecosystem productivity, NEP) depends on the net balance between gross primary productivity (GPP) and ecosystem respiration (TER). Through an analysis of European eddy covariance flux data sets, we find that the common climate relationships for primary production do not hold for NEP. This is explained by the fact that decreases in GPP are largely compensated by parallel decreases in TER when climatic factors become more limiting. Moreover, we found overall that water availability was a significant modulator of NEP, while the multivariate effect of mean annual temperature is small and not significant. These results indicate that climate- and particularly temperature-based projections of net carbon balance may be misleading. Future research should focus on interactions between the water and carbon cycles and the effects of disturbances on the carbon balance of terrestrial ecosystems.

Received 6 September 2006; accepted 24 October 2006; published 12 January 2007.

Citation: Reichstein, M., et al. (2007), Determinants of terrestrial ecosystem carbon balance inferred from European eddy covariance flux sites, Geophys. Res. Lett., 34, L01402, doi:10.1029/2006GL027880.

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