4.6 Article

Controls on carbon dynamics by ecosystem structure and climate for southeastern US slash pine plantations

Journal

ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS
Volume 82, Issue 1, Pages 101-128

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1890/11-0587.1

Keywords

carbon balance; drought; eddy covariance; Florida; forests; LAI; Pinus elliottii car elliottii Englm; radiation-use efficiency; slash pine

Categories

Funding

  1. Office of Science (BER), U.S. Department of Energy, through the SE Regional Center of the National Institute for Global Environmental Change
  2. National Institute for Climatic Change Research
  3. National institute of Food and Agriculture
  4. DOE [DE-FG02-06ER64318]
  5. Direct For Biological Sciences
  6. Div Of Biological Infrastructure [1029808] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences
  8. Emerging Frontiers [752017] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Planted pine forests.(plantations) in the southeastern United States are an important component of the continent's carbon balance. Forest carbon dynamics are affected by a range of factors including climatic variability. Multiyear droughts have affected the region in the past, and an increase in the frequency of drought events has been predicted. How this increased climatic variability will affect the capacity of the region's pine plantations to sequester carbon is not known. We used eddy covariance and biometric approaches to measure carbon dynamics over nine years in two slash pine plantations (Pilaus elliotti var elliottii Englm) in north Florida, consisting of a newly planted and a mid-rotation stand. During this time, the region experienced two multiyear droughts (1999-2002 and 2006-2008), separated by a three-year Wet period. Net ecosystem carbon accumulation measured using both approaches showed the same trends and magnitudes during plantation development. The newly planted site released 15.6 Mg C/ha during the first three years after planting, before becoming a carbon sink in year 4. Increases in carbon uptake during the early stages of stand development vere driven by the aggrading leaf area index (LA I). After canopy closure, both sites were continuous carbon sinks with net carbon uptake (NEE) fluctuating between 4 and similar to 8 Mg C.ha(-1)-yr(-1), depending on environmental conditions. Drought reduced NEE by 25% through its negative effects on both LAI and radiation-use efficiency, which resulted in a lamer impact on gross ecosystem carbon exchange than on ecosystem respiration. While results indicate that responses to drought involved complex interactions among water availability, LAI, and radiation-use efficiency, these ecosystems remain carbon sinks under current management strategies and climatic variability. Variation within locations is primarily due to major disturbances, such as logging in the current study and, to a much lesser extent, local environmental fluctuations. When data from this study are compared to flux data from a broad range of forests worldwide, these ecosystems fill a data gap in the warm-temperate zone and support a broad maximum NEE (for closed-canopy forests) between 8 C and 20 C mean annual temperature.

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