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Increases in the flux of carbon belowground stimulate nitrogen uptake and sustain the long-term enhancement of forest productivity under elevated CO₂

Authors :
John E, Drake
Anne, Gallet-Budynek
Kirsten S, Hofmockel
Emily S, Bernhardt
Sharon A, Billings
Robert B, Jackson
Kurt S, Johnsen
John, Lichter
Heather R, McCarthy
M Luke, McCormack
David J P, Moore
Ram, Oren
Sari, Palmroth
Richard P, Phillips
Jeffrey S, Pippen
Seth G, Pritchard
Kathleen K, Treseder
William H, Schlesinger
Evan H, Delucia
Adrien C, Finzi
Source :
Ecology letters. 14(4)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The earth's future climate state is highly dependent upon changes in terrestrial C storage in response to rising concentrations of atmospheric CO₂. Here we show that consistently enhanced rates of net primary production (NPP) are sustained by a C-cascade through the root-microbe-soil system; increases in the flux of C belowground under elevated CO₂ stimulated microbial activity, accelerated the rate of soil organic matter decomposition and stimulated tree uptake of N bound to this SOM. This process set into motion a positive feedback maintaining greater C gain under elevated CO₂ as a result of increases in canopy N content and higher photosynthetic N-use efficiency. The ecosystem-level consequence of the enhanced requirement for N and the exchange of plant C for N belowground is the dominance of C storage in tree biomass but the preclusion of a large C sink in the soil.

Details

ISSN :
14610248
Volume :
14
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Ecology letters
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........406e46219213225b86dd65e1ab2e6656