Influences of recovery from clear-cut, climate variability, and thinning on the carbon balance of a young ponderosa pine plantation

被引:101
|
作者
Misson, L
Tang, JW
Xu, M
McKay, M
Goldstein, A
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, ESPM Dept, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
[2] Rutgers State Univ, Cook Coll, Dept Ecol Evolut & Nat Resources, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA
关键词
disturbance; net ecosystem exchange; gross ecosystem productivity; ecosystem respiration; Pinus ponderosa; Sierra Nevada;
D O I
10.1016/j.agrformet.2005.04.001
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
From 1999 to 2002, the variations in carbon flux due to management practices (shrub removal, thinning) and climate variability were observed in a young ponderosa pine forest originated from clear-cutting and plantation in 1990. These measurements were done at the Blodgett Forest Ameriflux site located in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California. Thinning in spring 2000 decreased the leaf area index (LAI) by 34% and added 496 g C m(-2) of wood and leaf debris at the soil surface. Total ecosystem respiration was not significantly affected by thinning (1261 g C m(-2) in 1999 and 1273 g C m(-2) in 2000), while canopy photosynthesis decreased by 202 g C m(-2). As a result the ecosystem shifted from a net sink Of CO2 in 1999 (-201 g C m(-2)) to a small net source in 2000 (13 g C m(-2)). Woody and leaf debris resulting from thinning only accounted for maximum 1% and 7% of the total respiration flux, respectively. Thinning did not affect the relative proportion of the different components of respiration to an observable degree. Low soil water availability in summer 2001 and 2002 decreased the proportion of soil respiration to the total respiration. It also imposed limitations on canopy photosynthesis: as a result the ecosystem shifted from a sink to a source of carbon I month earlier than in a wetter year (1999). The leaf area index and biomass of the stand increased rapidly after the thinning. The ecosystem was again a sink of carbon in 2001 (-97 g C m(-2)) and 2002 (-172 g C m(-2)). The net carbon uptake outside the traditionally-defined growing season can be important in this ecosystem (NEE = -50 g C m(-2) in 2000), but interannual variations are significant due to differences in winter temperatures. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:207 / 222
页数:16
相关论文
共 6 条
  • [1] SIMULATION OF EVAPOTRANSPIRATION AND DRAINAGE FROM MATURE AND CLEAR-CUT DECIDUOUS FORESTS AND YOUNG PINE PLANTATION
    SWIFT, LW
    SWANK, WT
    MANKIN, JB
    LUXMOORE, RJ
    GOLDSTEIN, RA
    WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 1975, 11 (05) : 667 - 673
  • [2] Recovery of ponderosa pine ecosystem carbon and water fluxes from thinning and stand-replacing fire
    Dore, Sabina
    Montes-Helu, Mario
    Hart, Stephen C.
    Hungate, Bruce A.
    Koch, George W.
    Moon, John B.
    Finkral, Alex J.
    Kolb, Thomas E.
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2012, 18 (10) : 3171 - 3185
  • [3] Carbon balance of a partially harvested mixed conifer forest following mountain pine beetle attack and its comparison to a clear-cut
    Mathys, A.
    Black, T. A.
    Nesic, Z.
    Nishio, G.
    Brown, M.
    Spittlehouse, D. L.
    Fredeen, A. L.
    Bowler, R.
    Jassal, R. S.
    Grant, N. J.
    Burton, P. J.
    Trofymow, J. A.
    Meyer, G.
    BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2013, 10 (08) : 5451 - 5463
  • [4] Effects of climate variability on the carbon dioxide, water, and sensible heat fluxes above a ponderosa pine plantation in the Sierra Nevada (CA)
    Goldstein, AH
    Hultman, NE
    Fracheboud, JM
    Bauer, MR
    Panek, JA
    Xu, M
    Qi, Y
    Guenther, AB
    Baugh, W
    AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 2000, 101 (2-3) : 113 - 129
  • [5] Recovery dynamics of ecosystem carbon budgets in a young silver birch stand chronosequence after clear-cut - Estonian case study
    Aun, K.
    Kukumagi, M.
    Varik, M.
    Uri, M.
    Buht, M.
    Aosaar, J.
    Padari, A.
    Sepaste, A.
    Soosaar, K.
    Becker, H.
    Uri, V
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF FOREST RESEARCH, 2022, 37 (5-8) : 352 - 365
  • [6] Spatial variability of soil fungal and bacterial abundance: Consequences for carbon turnover along a transition from a forested to clear-cut site
    Churchland, Carolyn
    Grayston, Sue J.
    Bengtson, Per
    SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY, 2013, 63 : 5 - 13