Future increase in atmospheric CO concentrations will potentially enhance grassland biomass production and shift the functional group composition with consequences for ecosystem functioning. In the "GiFACE" experiment (Giessen Free Air Carbon dioxide Enrichment), fertilized grassland plots were fumigated with elevated CO (eCO ) year-round during daylight hours since 1998, at a level of +20% relative to ambient concentrations (in 1998, aCO was 364 ppm and eCO 399 ppm; in 2014, aCO was 397 ppm and eCO 518 ppm). Harvests were conducted twice annually through 23 years including 17 years with eCO (1998 to 2014). Biomass consisted of C3 grasses and forbs, with a small proportion of legumes. The total aboveground biomass (TAB) was significantly increased under eCO (p = .045 and .025, at first and second harvest). The dominant plant functional group grasses responded positively at the start, but for forbs, the effect of eCO started out as a negative response. The increase in TAB in response to eCO was approximately 15% during the period from 2006 to 2014, suggesting that there was no attenuation of eCO effects over time, tentatively a consequence of the fertilization management. Biomass and soil moisture responses were closely linked. The soil moisture surplus (c. 3%) in eCO manifested in the latter years was associated with a positive biomass response of both functional groups. The direction of the biomass response of the functional group forbs changed over the experimental duration, intensified by extreme weather conditions, pointing to the need of long-term field studies for obtaining reliable responses of perennial ecosystems to eCO and as a basis for model development.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.13705 | DOI Listing |
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