4.8 Article

Evidence of increased net ecosystem productivity associated with a longer vegetated season in a deciduous forest in south-central Indiana, USA

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 17, Issue 2, Pages 886-897

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2010.02281.x

Keywords

carbon cycle; climate change; eddy-covariance; leaf senescence; phenology

Funding

  1. Office of Science (BER), US Department of Energy, through the Midwestern Center of the National Institute for Global Environmental Change (NIGEC)
  2. National Institute for Climate Change Research (NICCR)
  3. Terrestrial Carbon Program (TCP)
  4. MMSF Property Management

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Observations of net ecosystem exchange (NEE) of carbon and its biophysical drivers have been collected at the AmeriFlux site in the Morgan-Monroe State Forest (MMSF) in Indiana, USA since 1998. Thus, this is one of the few deciduous forest sites in the world, where a decadal analysis on net ecosystem productivity (NEP) trends is possible. Despite the large interannual variability in NEP, the observations show a significant increase in forest productivity over the past 10 years (by an annual increment of about 10 g C m-2 yr-1). There is evidence that this trend can be explained by longer vegetative seasons, caused by extension of the vegetative activity in the fall. Both phenological and flux observations indicate that the vegetative season extended later in the fall with an increase in length of about 3 days yr-1 for the past 10 years. However, these changes are responsible for only 50% of the total annual gain in forest productivity in the past decade. A negative trend in air and soil temperature during the winter months may explain an equivalent increase in NEP through a decrease in ecosystem respiration.

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