Forest productivity under elevated CO₂ and O₃: positive feedbacks to soil N cycling sustain decade-long net primary productivity enhancement by CO₂.

Ecol Lett

School of Natural Resource & Environment and Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.

Published: December 2011

The accumulation of anthropogenic CO₂ in the Earth's atmosphere, and hence the rate of climate warming, is sensitive to stimulation of plant growth by higher concentrations of atmospheric CO₂. Here, we synthesise data from a field experiment in which three developing northern forest communities have been exposed to factorial combinations of elevated CO₂ and O₃. Enhanced net primary productivity (NPP) (c. 26% increase) under elevated CO₂ was sustained by greater root exploration of soil for growth-limiting N, as well as more rapid rates of litter decomposition and microbial N release during decay. Despite initial declines in forest productivity under elevated O₃, compensatory growth of O₃ -tolerant individuals resulted in equivalent NPP under ambient and elevated O₃. After a decade, NPP has remained enhanced under elevated CO₂ and has recovered under elevated O₃ by mechanisms that remain un-calibrated or not considered in coupled climate-biogeochemical models simulating interactions between the global C cycle and climate warming.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1461-0248.2011.01692.xDOI Listing

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