4.6 Article

Towards a universal model for carbon dioxide uptake by plants

Journal

NATURE PLANTS
Volume 3, Issue 9, Pages 734-741

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s41477-017-0006-8

Keywords

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Categories

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Programme of China [2013CB956602]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31600388]
  3. Australian Research Council
  4. Australian National Data Service (ANDS) grant
  5. Terrestrial Ecosystem Research Council (TERN) grants ('Ecosystem Modelling and Scaling Infrastructure'
  6. Australian Government National Collaborative Infrastructure Strategy
  7. DOE
  8. BER Office of Science at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  9. Macquarie University Research Fellowship
  10. CarboEuropeIP
  11. FAO-GTOS-TCO
  12. iLEAPS
  13. Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry
  14. National Science Foundation
  15. University of Tuscia
  16. Universite Laval
  17. Environment Canada
  18. US Department of Energy

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Gross primary production (GPP)-the uptake of carbon dioxide (CO2) by leaves, and its conversion to sugars by photosynthesis-is the basis for life on land. Earth System Models (ESMs) incorporating the interactions of land ecosystems and climate are used to predict the future of the terrestrial sink for anthropogenic CO21. ESMs require accurate representation of GPP. However, current ESMs disagree on how GPP responds to environmental variations(1,2), suggesting a need for a more robust theoretical framework for modelling(3,4). Here, we focus on a key quantity for GPP, the ratio of leaf internal to external CO2 (chi). chi is tightly regulated and depends on environmental conditions, but is represented empirically and incompletely in today's models. We show that a simple evolutionary optimality hypothesis(5,6) predicts specific quantitative dependencies of chi on temperature, vapour pressure deficit and elevation; and that these same dependencies emerge from an independent analysis of empirical chi values, derived from a worldwide dataset of >3,500 leaf stable carbon isotope measurements. A single global equation embodying these relationships then unifies the empirical light-use efficiency model(7) with the standard model of C-3 photosynthesis(8), and successfully predicts GPP measured at eddy-covariance flux sites. This success is notable given the equation's simplicity and broad applicability across biomes and plant functional types. It provides a theoretical underpinning for the analysis of plant functional coordination across species and emergent properties of ecosystems, and a potential basis for the reformulation of the controls of GPP in next-generation ESMs.

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