4.5 Article

Identifying differences in carbon exchange among arctic ecosystem types

Journal

ECOSYSTEMS
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages 288-304

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10021-005-0146-y

Keywords

carbon flux; leaf area index; tundra; landscape heterogeneity; net ecosystem exchange; photosynthesis; respiration; maximum likelihood analysis

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Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/D005795/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  2. NERC [NE/D005795/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Our objective was to determine how varied is the response of C cycling to temperature and irradiance in tundra vegetation. We used a large chamber to measure C exchange at 23 locations within a small arctic catchment in Alaska during summer 2003 and 2004. At each location, we determined light response curves of C exchange using shade cloths, twice during a growing season. We used data to fit a simple photosynthesis-irradiance, respiration-temperature model, with four parameters. We used a maximum likelihood technique to determine the acceptable parameter space for each light curve, given measurement uncertainty. We then explored which sites and time periods had parameter sets in common-an indication of functional similarity. We found that seven distinct parameter sets were required to explain observed C flux responses to temperature and light variation at all sites and time periods. The variation in estimated maximum photosynthetic rate (P-max) was strongly correlated with measurements of site leaf area index (LAI). The behavior of tussock tundra sites, the dominant vegetation of arctic tundra, could largely be described with a single parameter set, with a P-max of 9.7 mu mol m(-2) s(-1). Tussock tundra sites had, correspondingly, similar LAI ( mean = 0.66). Non-tussock sites ( for example, sedge and shrub tundras) had larger spatial and temporal variations in both C dynamic parameters (P-max varying from 9.7-25.7 mu mol m(-2) s(-1)) and LAI ( 0.6-2.0). There were no clear relationships between dominant non-tussock vegetation types and a particular parameter set. Our results suggest that C dynamics of the acidic tussock tundra slopes and hilltops in northern Alaska are relatively simply described during the peak growing season. However, the foot-slopes and water tracks have more variable patterns of LAI and C exchange, not simply related to the dominant vegetation type.

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