Atmospheric phosphorus deposition amplifies carbon sinks in simulations of a tropical forest in Central Africa.

New Phytol

Department of Environment, Computational and Applied Vegetation Ecology - CAVElab, Ghent University, Ghent, 9000, Belgium.

Published: March 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Atmospheric transport and deposition of nutrients can potentially mitigate declines in soil fertility in Central African tropical forests due to biomass accumulation.
  • The study uses a biosphere model to assess how changes in nitrogen and phosphorus deposition impact plant nutrition and carbon sinks in a lowland forest site.
  • It finds that since the 1980s, increased nutrient deposition has significantly contributed to carbon sequestration, comparable to the effects of rising CO2 and climate change, with phosphorus deposition being more influential than nitrogen.

Article Abstract

Spatial redistribution of nutrients by atmospheric transport and deposition could theoretically act as a continental-scale mechanism which counteracts declines in soil fertility caused by nutrient lock-up in accumulating biomass in tropical forests in Central Africa. However, to what extent it affects carbon sinks in forests remains elusive. Here we use a terrestrial biosphere model to quantify the impact of changes in atmospheric nitrogen and phosphorus deposition on plant nutrition and biomass carbon sink at a typical lowland forest site in Central Africa. We find that the increase in nutrient deposition since the 1980s could have contributed to the carbon sink over the past four decades up to an extent which is similar to that from the combined effects of increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide and climate change. Furthermore, we find that the modelled carbon sink responds to changes in phosphorus deposition, but less so to nitrogen deposition. The pronounced response of ecosystem productivity to changes in nutrient deposition illustrates a potential mechanism that could control carbon sinks in Central Africa. Monitoring the quantity and quality of nutrient deposition is needed in this region, given the changes in nutrient deposition due to human land use.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.18535DOI Listing

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