A trade-off between plant and soil carbon storage under elevated CO2

被引:0
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作者
C. Terrer
R. P. Phillips
B. A. Hungate
J. Rosende
J. Pett-Ridge
M. E. Craig
K. J. van Groenigen
T. F. Keenan
B. N. Sulman
B. D. Stocker
P. B. Reich
A. F. A. Pellegrini
E. Pendall
H. Zhang
R. D. Evans
Y. Carrillo
J. B. Fisher
K. Van Sundert
Sara Vicca
R. B. Jackson
机构
[1] Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,Physical and Life Sciences Directorate
[2] Stanford University,Department of Earth System Science
[3] Indiana University,Department of Biology
[4] Northern Arizona University,Center for Ecosystem Science and Society
[5] Northern Arizona University,Department of Biological Sciences
[6] Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona,Institut de Ciència i Tecnologia Ambientals
[7] Oak Ridge National Laboratory,Environmental Sciences Division and Climate Change Science Institute
[8] University of Exeter,Department of Geography, College of Life and Environmental Sciences
[9] Policy and Management,Department of Environmental Science
[10] UC Berkeley,Climate and Ecosystem Sciences Division
[11] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,Department of Environmental Systems Science
[12] ETH,Swiss Federal Institute for Forest
[13] Snow and Landscape Research WSL,Department of Forest Resources
[14] University of Minnesota,Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment
[15] Western Sydney University,Department of Plant Sciences
[16] University of Cambridge,Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment
[17] University of Oxford,School of Biological Sciences and the Stable Isotope Core Laboratory
[18] Washington State University,Jet Propulsion Laboratory
[19] California Institute of Technology,Joint Institute for Regional Earth System Science and Engineering
[20] University of California at Los Angeles,Plants and Ecosystems (PLECO), Biology Department
[21] University of Antwerp,Woods Institute for the Environment and Precourt Institute for Energy
[22] Stanford University,undefined
来源
Nature | 2021年 / 591卷
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摘要
Terrestrial ecosystems remove about 30 per cent of the carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted by human activities each year1, yet the persistence of this carbon sink depends partly on how plant biomass and soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks respond to future increases in atmospheric CO2 (refs. 2,3). Although plant biomass often increases in elevated CO2 (eCO2) experiments4–6, SOC has been observed to increase, remain unchanged or even decline7. The mechanisms that drive this variation across experiments remain poorly understood, creating uncertainty in climate projections8,9. Here we synthesized data from 108 eCO2 experiments and found that the effect of eCO2 on SOC stocks is best explained by a negative relationship with plant biomass: when plant biomass is strongly stimulated by eCO2, SOC storage declines; conversely, when biomass is weakly stimulated, SOC storage increases. This trade-off appears to be related to plant nutrient acquisition, in which plants increase their biomass by mining the soil for nutrients, which decreases SOC storage. We found that, overall, SOC stocks increase with eCO2 in grasslands (8 ± 2 per cent) but not in forests (0 ± 2 per cent), even though plant biomass in grasslands increase less (9 ± 3 per cent) than in forests (23 ± 2 per cent). Ecosystem models do not reproduce this trade-off, which implies that projections of SOC may need to be revised.
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页码:599 / 603
页数:4
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