4.8 Article

Elevated CO2 further lengthens growing season under warming conditions

Journal

NATURE
Volume 510, Issue 7504, Pages 259-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature13207

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Funding

  1. US Department of Agriculture Agricultural Research Center (USDA-ARS) Climate Change, Soils & Emissions Program
  2. US Department of Energy's Office of Science through the Terrestrial Ecosystem Science Program
  3. National Science Foundation (DEB) [1021559]
  4. Colorado State University
  5. Direct For Biological Sciences
  6. Division Of Environmental Biology [1021559] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Observations of a longer growing season through earlier plant growth in temperate to polar regions have been thought to be a response to climate warming(1-5). However, data from experimental warming studies indicate that many species that initiate leaf growth and flowering earlier also reach seed maturation and senesce earlier, shortening their active and reproductive periods(6-10). A conceptual model to explain this apparent contradiction(11), and an analysis of the effect of elevated CO2-which can delay annual life cycle events(12-14)-on changing season length, have not been tested. Here we show that experimental warming in a temperate grassland led to a longer growing season through earlier leaf emergence by the first species to leaf, often a grass, and constant or delayed senescence by other species that were the last to senesce, supporting the conceptual model. Elevated CO2 further extended growing, but not reproductive, season length in the warmed grassland by conserving water, which enabled most species to remain active longer. Our results suggest that a longer growing season, especially in years or biomes where water is a limiting factor, is not due to warming alone, but also to higher atmospheric CO2 concentrations that extend the active period of plant annual life cycles.

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