首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Productivity,Respiration, and Light-Response Parameters of World Grassland and Agroecosystems Derived From Flux-Tower Measurements
Authors:Tagir G Gilmanov  L Aires  Z Barcza  VS Baron  L Belelli  J Beringer  D Billesbach  D Bonal  J Bradford  E Ceschia  D Cook  C Corradi  A Frank  D Gianelle  C Gimeno  T Gruenwald  Haiqiang Guo  N Hanan  L Haszpra  J Heilman  Guangsheng Zhou
Institution:1. Professor, Department of Biology and Microbiology, South Dakota State University, Brookings, SAG 304, Box 2207B, SD 57007, USA;2. FLUXNET La Thuile data set;3. WORLDGRASSAGRIFLUX data set;4. US Department of Agriculture–Agricultural Research Service RANGEFLUX data set;1. School of Geographical Sciences, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou 510006, China;2. Key Laboratory of Vegetation Restoration and Management of Degraded Ecosystems, South China Botanical Garden, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510650, China;3. Institute of Water Resources Protection in Yangtze River, Wuhan 430051, China;4. Department of Ecology, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou 510642, China
Abstract:Grasslands and agroecosystems occupy one-third of the terrestrial area, but their contribution to the global carbon cycle remains uncertain. We used a set of 316 site-years of CO2 exchange measurements to quantify gross primary productivity, respiration, and light-response parameters of grasslands, shrublands/savanna, wetlands, and cropland ecosystems worldwide. We analyzed data from 72 global flux-tower sites partitioned into gross photosynthesis and ecosystem respiration with the use of the light-response method (Gilmanov, T. G., D. A. Johnson, and N. Z. Saliendra. 2003. Growing season CO2 fluxes in a sagebrush-steppe ecosystem in Idaho: Bowen ratio/energy balance measurements and modeling. Basic and Applied Ecology 4:167–183) from the RANGEFLUX and WORLDGRASSAGRIFLUX data sets supplemented by 46 sites from the FLUXNET La Thuile data set partitioned with the use of the temperature-response method (Reichstein, M., E. Falge, D. Baldocchi, D. Papale, R. Valentini, M. Aubinet, P. Berbigier, C. Bernhofer, N. Buchmann, M. Falk, T. Gilmanov, A. Granier, T. Grünwald, K. Havránková, D. Janous, A. Knohl, T. Laurela, A. Lohila, D. Loustau, G. Matteucci, T. Meyers, F. Miglietta, J. M. Ourcival, D. Perrin, J. Pumpanen, S. Rambal, E. Rotenberg, M. Sanz, J. Tenhunen, G. Seufert, F. Vaccari, T. Vesala, and D. Yakir. 2005. On the separation of net ecosystem exchange into assimilation and ecosystem respiration: review and improved algorithm. Global Change Biology 11:1424–1439). Maximum values of the quantum yield (α=75 mmol · mol?1), photosynthetic capacity (Amax=3.4 mg CO2 · m?2 · s?1), gross photosynthesis (Pg,max=116 g CO2 · m?2 · d?1), and ecological light-use efficiency (εecol=59 mmol · mol?1) of managed grasslands and high-production croplands exceeded those of most forest ecosystems, indicating the potential of nonforest ecosystems for uptake of atmospheric CO2. Maximum values of gross primary production (8 600 g CO2 · m?2 · yr?1), total ecosystem respiration (7 900 g CO2 · m?2 · yr?1), and net CO2 exchange (2 400 g CO2 · m?2 · yr?1) were observed for intensively managed grasslands and high-yield crops, and are comparable to or higher than those for forest ecosystems, excluding some tropical forests. On average, 80% of the nonforest sites were apparent sinks for atmospheric CO2, with mean net uptake of 700 g CO2 · m?2 · yr?1 for intensive grasslands and 933 g CO2 · m?2 · d?1 for croplands. However, part of these apparent sinks is accumulated in crops and forage, which are carbon pools that are harvested, transported, and decomposed off site. Therefore, although agricultural fields may be predominantly sinks for atmospheric CO2, this does not imply that they are necessarily increasing their carbon stock.
Keywords:
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号