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

Winter harvesting reduces methane emissions and enhances blue carbon potential in coastal phragmites wetlands.

Sci Total Environ

August 2024

State Key Laboratory of Estuarine and Coastal Research, Center for Blue Carbon Science and Technology, East China Normal University, Shanghai, China; Yangtze Delta Estuarine Wetland Ecosystem Observation and Research Station, Ministry of Education & Shanghai Science and Technology Committee, Shanghai, China; Institute of Eco-Chongming, East China Normal University, Shanghai, China.

Enhancing the ability of coastal blue carbon to accumulate and store carbon and reduce net greenhouse gas emissions is an essential component of a comprehensive approach for tackling climate change. The annual winter harvesting of Phragmites is common worldwide. However, the effects of harvesting on methane (CH) emissions and its potential as an effective blue carbon management strategy have rarely been reported.

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Carbohydrate reserves play a vital role in plant survival during periods of negative carbon balance. Under a carbon-limited scenario, we expect a trade-offs between carbon allocation to growth, reserves, and defense. A resulting hypothesis is that carbon allocation to reserves exhibits a coordinated variation with functional traits associated with the 'fast-slow' plant economics spectrum.

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Article Synopsis
  • Secondary tropical forests are vital for carbon storage and biodiversity, making it necessary to understand their growth patterns for effective restoration and climate change strategies.
  • The study analyzed demographic information from over 500 tree species across different stages of forest succession in various climates to determine the range of demographic strategies (growth, mortality, recruitment rates) present.
  • Findings indicate that early successional forests already exhibit the full range of demographic strategies found in old-growth forests, suggesting that known diversity from old-growth studies can apply broadly, but additional research in secondary forests is still needed.
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One of the largest uncertainties in the terrestrial carbon cycle is the timing and magnitude of soil organic carbon (SOC) response to climate and vegetation change. This uncertainty prevents models from adequately capturing SOC dynamics and challenges the assessment of management and climate change effects on soils. Reducing these uncertainties requires simultaneous investigation of factors controlling the amount (SOC abundance) and duration (SOC persistence) of stored C.

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Current biogeochemical models produce carbon-climate feedback projections with large uncertainties, often attributed to their structural differences when simulating soil organic carbon (SOC) dynamics worldwide. However, choices of model parameter values that quantify the strength and represent properties of different soil carbon cycle processes could also contribute to model simulation uncertainties. Here, we demonstrate the critical role of using common observational data in reducing model uncertainty in estimates of global SOC storage.

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Plant trait data are used to quantify how plants respond to environmental factors and can act as indicators of ecosystem function. Measured trait values are influenced by genetics, trade-offs, competition, environmental conditions, and phenology. These interacting effects on traits are poorly characterized across taxa, and for many traits, measurement protocols are not standardized.

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Emerging technologies are increasingly employed in environmental citizen science projects. This integration offers benefits and opportunities for scientists and participants alike. Citizen science can support large-scale, long-term monitoring of species occurrences, behaviour and interactions.

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Parametrization of biological assumptions to simulate growth of tree branching architectures.

Tree Physiol

May 2024

Data-intensive Systems and Visualization Group, Technische Universität Ilmenau, Ehrenbergstraße 29, Ilmenau 98693, Germany.

Modeling and simulating the growth of the branching of tree species remains a challenge. With existing approaches, we can reconstruct or rebuild the branching architectures of real tree species, but the simulation of the growth process remains unresolved. First, we present a tree growth model to generate branching architectures that resemble real tree species.

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Incorporating photosynthetic acclimation improves stomatal optimisation models.

Plant Cell Environ

September 2024

Department of Life Sciences, Georgina Mace Centre for the Living Planet, Imperial College London, Silwood Park Campus, Ascot, UK.

Article Synopsis
  • Stomatal opening in leaves helps regulate carbon and water exchange, crucial for understanding plant responses to climate change.
  • New optimality-based models analyze stomatal behavior but often overlook how plants adjust biochemically to drought stress.
  • A study on 37 plant species shows that including photosynthetic acclimation in these models significantly improves predictions of carbon assimilation during drought conditions.
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Divergent driving mechanisms of community temporal stability in China's drylands.

Environ Sci Ecotechnol

July 2024

State Key Laboratory of Urban and Regional Ecology, Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100085, China.

Climate change and anthropogenic activities are reshaping dryland ecosystems globally at an unprecedented pace, jeopardizing their stability. The stability of these ecosystems is crucial for maintaining ecological balance and supporting local communities. Yet, the mechanisms governing their stability are poorly understood, largely due to the scarcity of comprehensive field data.

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Estimating river flood risks under climate change is challenging, largely due to the interacting and combined influences of various flood-generating drivers. However, a more detailed quantitative analysis of such compounding effects and the implications of their interplay remains underexplored on a large scale. Here, we use explainable machine learning to disentangle compounding effects between drivers and quantify their importance for different flood magnitudes across thousands of catchments worldwide.

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A clear definition of carbon sequestration in soils is necessary to quantify soil's role in climate change mitigation accurately. Don et al. (2023) proposed defining carbon sequestration as "[the] Process of transferring carbon from the atmosphere into the soil through plants or other organisms, which is retained as soil organic carbon resulting in a global carbon stock increase of the soil".

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The article presents results of using remote sensing images and machine learning to map and assess land potential based on time-series of potential Fraction of Absorbed Photosynthetically Active Radiation (FAPAR) composites. Land potential here refers to the potential vegetation productivity in the hypothetical absence of short-term anthropogenic influence, such as intensive agriculture and urbanization. Knowledge on this ecological land potential could support the assessment of levels of land degradation as well as restoration potentials.

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It is well known that biodiversity positively affects ecosystem functioning, leading to enhanced ecosystem stability. However, this knowledge is mainly based on analyses using single ecosystem functions, while studies focusing on the stability of ecosystem multifunctionality (EMF) are rare. Taking advantage of a long-term grassland biodiversity experiment, we studied the effect of plant diversity (1-60 species) on EMF over 5 years, its temporal stability, as well as multifunctional resistance and resilience to a 2-year drought event.

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Wood density is a fundamental property related to tree biomechanics and hydraulic function while playing a crucial role in assessing vegetation carbon stocks by linking volumetric retrieval and a mass estimate. This study provides a high-resolution map of the global distribution of tree wood density at the 0.01° (~1 km) spatial resolution, derived from four decision trees machine learning models using a global database of 28,822 tree-level wood density measurements.

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Forest biomass is an essential resource in relation to the green transition and its assessment is key for the sustainable management of forest resources. Here, we present a forest biomass dataset for Europe based on the best available inventory and satellite data, with a higher level of harmonisation and spatial resolution than other existing data. This database provides statistics and maps of the forest area, biomass stock and their share available for wood supply in the year 2020, and statistics on gross and net volume increment in 2010-2020, for 38 European countries.

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Drought affects the complex interactions between Norway spruce, the bark beetle Ips typographus and associated microorganisms. We investigated the interplay of tree water status, defense and carbohydrate reserves with the incidence of bark beetle attack and infection of associated fungi in mature spruce trees. We installed roofs to induce a 2-yr moderate drought in a managed spruce stand to examine a maximum of 10 roof and 10 control trees for resin flow (RF), predawn twig water potentials, terpene, phenolic and carbohydrate bark concentrations, and bark beetle borings in field bioassays before and after inoculation with Endoconidiophora polonica and Grosmannia penicillata.

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Tropical forest root characteristics and resource acquisition strategies are underrepresented in vegetation and global models, hampering the prediction of forest-climate feedbacks for these carbon-rich ecosystems. Lowland tropical forests often have globally unique combinations of high taxonomic and functional biodiversity, rainfall seasonality, and strongly weathered infertile soils, giving rise to distinct patterns in root traits and functions compared with higher latitude ecosystems. We provide a roadmap for integrating recent advances in our understanding of tropical forest belowground function into vegetation models, focusing on water and nutrient acquisition.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigates how different tree species adjust their carbon (C) allocation strategies in response to varying water availability, specifically during a drought year followed by a wet year in a Mediterranean forest.
  • - Results show that during the drought, C uptake decreased, C use remained stable, and more carbon was allocated to belowground storage, with respiration being the largest carbon sink.
  • - The analysis reveals that trees relied on stored starch to manage sugar levels, with varying responses in C allocation among species, highlighting the physiological impacts of drought conditions on mixed forests amid climate change.
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Organismal functional strategies form a continuum from slow- to fast-growing organisms, in response to common drivers such as resource availability and disturbance. However, whether there is synchronisation of these strategies at the entire community level is unclear. Here, we combine trait data for >2800 above- and belowground taxa from 14 trophic guilds spanning a disturbance and resource availability gradient in German grasslands.

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In situ short-term responses of Amazonian understory plants to elevated CO.

Plant Cell Environ

May 2024

Faculdde de Filosofia, Ciências e Letras de Ribeirão Preto, Departamento de Biologia, Universidade de São Paulo, Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo, Brazil.

The response of plants to increasing atmospheric CO depends on the ecological context where the plants are found. Several experiments with elevated CO (eCO) have been done worldwide, but the Amazonian forest understory has been neglected. As the central Amazon is limited by light and phosphorus, understanding how understory responds to eCO is important for foreseeing how the forest will function in the future.

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Improved atmospheric constraints on Southern Ocean CO exchange.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

February 2024

Global Monitoring Laboratory, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Boulder, CO 80309.

Article Synopsis
  • Improved estimates of air-sea CO exchange in the Southern Ocean were derived using atmospheric CO measurements and an advanced inverse model, unveiling previously unnoticed features in seasonal flux cycles.
  • The findings reveal a weak winter outgassing in polar regions and significantly stronger summer CO uptake in polar/subpolar areas than earlier neural-network estimates.
  • The study highlights issues with atmospheric transport models, indicating they often overestimate mixing at high southern latitudes during summer, which affects the accuracy of CO exchange estimates.
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Whereas temporal variability of plant phenology in response to climate change has already been well studied, the spatial variability of phenology is not well understood. Given that phenological shifts may affect biotic interactions, there is a need to investigate how the variability in environmental factors relates to the spatial variability in herbaceous species' phenology by at the same time considering their functional traits to predict their general and species-specific responses to future climate change. In this project, we analysed phenology records of 148 herbaceous species, which were observed for a single year by the PhenObs network in 15 botanical gardens.

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