772 results match your criteria: "Max-Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry[Affiliation]"

Article Synopsis
  • Ecosystems act as both sources and sinks for atmospheric carbon (C), and their carbon use efficiency (CUE) is crucial for mitigating climate change.
  • Increased nitrogen (N) availability from human activities may lead to phosphorus (P) limitations in terrestrial ecosystems, affecting how plants and microorganisms utilize carbon.
  • In a Mediterranean tree-grass ecosystem study, it was found that wetter conditions and N fertilization improved CUE, but seasonal changes and potential longer dry summers could decrease CUE in the future.
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Plant diversity enhances ecosystem multifunctionality via multitrophic diversity.

Nat Ecol Evol

November 2024

State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.

Ecosystem functioning depends on biodiversity at multiple trophic levels, yet relationships between multitrophic diversity and ecosystem multifunctionality have been poorly explored, with studies often focusing on individual trophic levels and functions and on specific ecosystem types. Here, we show that plant diversity can affect ecosystem functioning both directly and by affecting other trophic levels. Using data on 13 trophic groups and 13 ecosystem functions from two large biodiversity experiments-one representing temperate grasslands and the other subtropical forests-we found that plant diversity increases multifunctionality through elevated multitrophic diversity.

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How can event attribution science underpin financial decisions on Loss and Damage?

PNAS Nexus

August 2024

Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace (IPSL), French National Centre for Scientific Research, Université Paris-Saclay, Sorbonne Université, place Jussieu, 75252 Paris, France.

With climate extremes hitting nations across the globe, disproportionately burdening vulnerable developing countries, the prompt operation of the Loss and Damage fund is of paramount importance. As decisions on resource disbursement at the international level, and investment strategies at the national level, loom, the climate science community's role in providing fair and effective evidence is crucial. Attribution science can provide useful information for decision makers, but both ethical implications and deep uncertainty cannot be ignored.

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The linkage between functional traits and drone-derived phenology of 74 Northern Hemisphere tree species.

Sci Total Environ

November 2024

TUM School of Life Sciences, Ecoclimatology, Technical University of Munich, Hans-Carl-von-Carlowitz-Platz 2, 85354 Freising, Germany; Institute for Advanced Study, Technical University of Munich, Lichtenbergstraße 2a, 85748 Garching, Germany. Electronic address:

Tree phenology is a major component of the global carbon and water cycle, serving as a fingerprint of climate change, and exhibiting significant variability both within and between species. In the emerging field of drone monitoring, it remains unclear whether this phenological variability can be effectively captured across numerous tree species. Additionally, the drivers behind interspecific variations in the phenology of deciduous trees are poorly understood, although they may be linked to plant functional traits.

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Introduction: Soil drought during summer in Central Europe has become more frequent and severe over the last decades. European forests are suffering increasing damage, particularly Norway spruce. Douglas-fir ( (Mirbel) Franco), a non-native tree species, is considered as a promising alternative to build drought-resilient forests.

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Article Synopsis
  • Elites were very important in shaping Europe after the Roman Empire fell, influencing both big and small communities during the Early Middle Ages.
  • Researchers studied a community in Italy from the 6th to 8th centuries and found that it was made up of related elite families that grew into one big family over time.
  • This community was diverse, welcoming different people as it developed, showing that powerful leaders could bring together various backgrounds instead of just sticking to their own.
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Enhanced nitrous oxide emission factors due to climate change increase the mitigation challenge in the agricultural sector.

Glob Chang Biol

August 2024

Climate and Ecosystem Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California, USA.

Effective nitrogen fertilizer management is crucial for reducing nitrous oxide (NO) emissions while ensuring food security within planetary boundaries. However, climate change might also interact with management practices to alter NO emission and emission factors (EFs), adding further uncertainties to estimating mitigation potentials. Here, we developed a new hybrid modeling framework that integrates a machine learning model with an ensemble of eight process-based models to project EFs under different climate and nitrogen policy scenarios.

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Future changes in climate, together with rising atmospheric , may reorganise the functional composition of ecosystems. Without long-term historical data, predicting how traits will respond to environmental conditions-in particular, water availability-remains a challenge. While eco-evolutionary optimality theory (EEO) can provide insight into how plants adapt to their environment, EEO approaches to date have been formulated on the assumption that plants maximise carbon gain, which omits the important role of tissue construction and size in determining growth rates and fitness.

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Article Synopsis
  • * The study reveals that in 2019, Nr had a net cooling effect on the climate due to factors like increased aerosol loading, which outweighs the warming effects from greenhouse gases like nitrous oxide and ozone.
  • * Future scenarios suggest that while Nr's cooling effect may weaken, warming will likely persist, emphasizing the need to reduce both Nr and greenhouse gas emissions to meet climate goals set by the Paris Agreement.
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Direct observational evidence of strong CO uptake in the Southern Ocean.

Sci Adv

July 2024

Centre for Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, School of Environmental Sciences, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.

The Southern Ocean is the primary region for the uptake of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO) and is, therefore, crucial for Earth's climate. However, the Southern Ocean CO flux estimates reveal substantial uncertainties and lack direct validation. Using seven independent and directly measured air-sea CO flux datasets, we identify a 25% stronger CO uptake in the Southern Ocean than shipboard dataset-based flux estimates.

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Reconstructing the tree of life and understanding the relationships of taxa are core questions in evolutionary and systematic biology. The main advances in this field in the last decades were derived from molecular phylogenetics; however, for most species, molecular data are not available. Here, we explore the applicability of 2 deep learning methods-supervised classification approaches and unsupervised similarity learning-to infer organism relationships from specimen images.

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Single particle inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (spICP-MS) is a well-established technique to characterize the size, particle number concentration (PNC), and elemental composition of engineered nanoparticles (NPs) and colloids in aqueous suspensions. However, a method capable of directly analyzing water-sensitive or highly reactive NPs in alcoholic suspension has not been reported yet. Here, we present a novel spICP-MS method for characterizing the main cement hydration product, i.

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Article Synopsis
  • Understanding how plant communities react to global changes is essential for predicting future ecosystem dynamics.
  • The CoRRE Trait Data includes information on 17 plant traits for 4,079 vascular plant species from grassland experiments worldwide.
  • This dataset can help researchers explore the effects of global change on diverse plant populations and ecosystems.
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The extreme dry and hot 2015/16 El Niño episode caused large losses in tropical live aboveground carbon (AGC) stocks. Followed by climatic conditions conducive to high vegetation productivity since 2016, tropical AGC are expected to recover from large losses during the El Niño episode; however, the recovery rate and its spatial distribution remain unknown. Here, we used low-frequency microwave satellite data to track AGC changes, and showed that tropical AGC stocks returned to pre-El Niño levels by the end of 2020, resulting in an AGC sink of Pg C year during 2014-2020.

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Increased crossing of thermal stress thresholds of vegetation under global warming.

Glob Chang Biol

July 2024

Institute of Carbon Neutrality, Sino-French Institute for Earth System Science, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, Peking University, Beijing, China.

Temperature extremes exert a significant influence on terrestrial ecosystems, but the precise levels at which these extremes trigger adverse shifts in vegetation productivity have remained elusive. In this study, we have derived two critical thresholds, using standard deviations (SDs) of growing-season temperature and satellite-based vegetation productivity as key indicators. Our findings reveal that, on average, vegetation productivity experiences rapid suppression when confronted with temperature anomalies exceeding 1.

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Tropical forest degradation from selective logging, fire and edge effects is a major driver of carbon and biodiversity loss, with annual rates comparable to those of deforestation. However, its actual extent and long-term impacts remain uncertain at global tropical scale. Here we quantify the magnitude and persistence of multiple types of degradation on forest structure by combining satellite remote sensing data on pantropical moist forest cover changes with estimates of canopy height and biomass from spaceborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR).

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study examines the performance of phosphorus-enabled land surface models in predicting CO effects on ecosystem responses to climate change, using data from a long-term forest experiment.
  • - Most models accurately predicted the direction and magnitude of CO effects on carbon sequestration but tended to overestimate plant carbon uptake and growth.
  • - Key areas for improvement include photosynthesis scaling, plant nutrient balance, belowground carbon allocation, and their impact on plant-microbial interactions, suggesting models may overestimate the global carbon sink driven by CO.
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Environmental versus phylogenetic controls on leaf nitrogen and phosphorous concentrations in vascular plants.

Nat Commun

June 2024

Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Environmental Systems Science, ETH, Universitätsstrasse 2, 8092, Zürich, Switzerland.

Global patterns of leaf nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) stoichiometry have been interpreted as reflecting phenotypic plasticity in response to the environment, or as an overriding effect of the distribution of species growing in their biogeochemical niches. Here, we balance these contrasting views. We compile a global dataset of 36,413 paired observations of leaf N and P concentrations, taxonomy and 45 environmental covariates, covering 7,549 sites and 3,700 species, to investigate how species identity and environmental variables control variations in mass-based leaf N and P concentrations, and the N:P ratio.

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The shortage of decades-long continuous measurements of ecosystem processes limits our understanding of how changing climate impacts forest ecosystems. We used continuous eddy-covariance and hydrometeorological data over 2002-2022 from a young Douglas-fir stand on Vancouver Island, Canada to assess the long-term trend and interannual variability in evapotranspiration (ET) and transpiration (T). Collectively, annual T displayed a decreasing trend over the 21 years with a rate of 1% yr, which is attributed to the stomatal downregulation induced by rising atmospheric CO concentration.

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Species delimitation 4.0: integrative taxonomy meets artificial intelligence.

Trends Ecol Evol

August 2024

Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Department of Biogeochemical Integration, 07745 Jena, Germany; German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), Halle-Jena-Leipzig, Puschstrasse 4, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.

Although species are central units for biological research, recent findings in genomics are raising awareness that what we call species can be ill-founded entities due to solely morphology-based, regional species descriptions. This particularly applies to groups characterized by intricate evolutionary processes such as hybridization, polyploidy, or asexuality. Here, challenges of current integrative taxonomy (genetics/genomics + morphology + ecology, etc.

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The capacity for terrestrial ecosystems to sequester additional carbon (C) with rising CO concentrations depends on soil nutrient availability. Previous evidence suggested that mature forests growing on phosphorus (P)-deprived soils had limited capacity to sequester extra biomass under elevated CO (refs. ), but uncertainty about ecosystem P cycling and its CO response represents a crucial bottleneck for mechanistic prediction of the land C sink under climate change.

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Effects of canopy gaps on microclimate, soil biological activity and their relationship in a European mixed floodplain forest.

Sci Total Environ

September 2024

Systematic Botany and Functional Biodiversity, Leipzig University, Johannisallee 21, 04103 Leipzig, Germany; German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig, Puschstraße 4, 04103 Leipzig, Germany; Max-Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Hans-Knöll-Straße 10, 07745 Jena, Germany.

Forest canopy gaps can influence understorey microclimate and ecosystem functions such as decomposition. Gaps can arise from silviculture or tree mortality, increasingly influenced by climate change. However, to what degree canopy gaps affect the buffered microclimate in the understorey under macroclimatic changes is unclear.

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The distribution of geochemical species are typically either (log)normally distributed or follow power laws. Here we link these types of distributions to the dynamics of the system that generates these distributions, showing that power laws can emerge in dissipative systems far from equilibrium while (log)normal distributions are found for species for which the concentrations are close to equilibrium. We use observations of the chemical composition of river water from the sampling space in central Italy as well as discharge data to test this interpretation.

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With the increasing frequencies of extreme weather events caused by climate change, the risk of forest damage from insect attacks grows. Storms and droughts can damage and weaken trees, reduce tree vigour and defence capacity and thus provide host trees that can be successfully attacked by damaging insects, as often observed in Norway spruce stands attacked by the Eurasian spruce bark beetle Ips typographus. Following storms, partially uprooted trees with grounded crowns suffer reduced water uptake and carbon assimilation, which may lower their vigour and decrease their ability to defend against insect attack.

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