4.8 Article

Climate change-induced vegetation change as a driver of increased subarctic biogenic volatile organic compound emissions

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 21, 期 9, 页码 3478-3488

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12953

关键词

Arctic; BVOCs; climate change; isoprene; monoterpene; plant volatiles; sesquiterpene; temperature; vegetation change

资金

  1. Maj and Tor Nessling Foundation
  2. Danish Council for Independent Research | Natural Sciences
  3. Villum Foundation
  4. Carlsberg Foundation
  5. Danish National Research Foundation (within Center for Permafrost)
  6. Villum Fonden [00007189] Funding Source: researchfish

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Emissions of biogenic volatile organic compounds (BVOCs) have been earlier shown to be highly temperature sensitive in subarctic ecosystems. As these ecosystems experience rapidly advancing pronounced climate warming, we aimed to investigate how warming affects the BVOC emissions in the long term (up to 13 treatment years). We also aimed to assess whether the increased litterfall resulting from the vegetation changes in the warming subarctic would affect the emissions. The study was conducted in a field experiment with factorial open-top chamber warming and annual litter addition treatments on subarctic heath in Abisko, northern Sweden. After 11 and 13 treatment years, BVOCs were sampled from plant communities in the experimental plots using a push-pull enclosure technique and collection into adsorbent cartridges during the growing season and analyzed with gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Plant species coverage in the plots was analyzed by the point intercept method. Warming by 2 degrees C caused a 2-fold increase in monoterpene and 5-fold increase in sesquiterpene emissions, averaged over all measurements. When the momentary effect of temperature was diminished by standardization of emissions to a fixed temperature, warming still had a significant effect suggesting that emissions were also indirectly increased. This indirect increase appeared to result from increased plant coverage and changes in vegetation composition. The litter addition treatment also caused significant increases in the emission rates of some BVOC groups, especially when combined with warming. The combined treatment had both the largest vegetation changes and the highest BVOC emissions. The increased emissions under litter addition were probably a result of a changed vegetation composition due to alleviated nutrient limitation and stimulated microbial production of BVOCs. We suggest that the changes in the subarctic vegetation composition induced by climate warming will be the major factor indirectly affecting the BVOC emission potentials and composition.

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