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Decadal biomass increment in early secondary succession woody ecosystems is increased by CO2 enrichment (2019)
Walker, Anthony P. ; De Kauwe, Martin G. ; Medlyn, Belinda E. ; Zaehle, Sönke ; Iversen, Colleen M. ; Asao, Shinichi ; Guenet, Bertrand ; Harper, Anna ; Hickler, Thomas ; Hungate, Bruce A. ; Jain, Atul Kumar ; Luo, Yiqi ; Lu, Xingjie ; Lu, Meng ; Luus, Kristina ; Megonigal, J. Patrick ; Oren, Ram ; Ryan, Edmund ; Shu, Shijie ; Talhelm, Alan ; Wang, Ying-Ping ; Warren, Jeffrey M. ; Werner, Christian ; Xia, Jianyang ; Yang, Bai ; Zak, Donald R. ; Norby, Richard J.
Increasing atmospheric CO2 stimulates photosynthesis which can increase net primary production (NPP), but at longer timescales may not necessarily increase plant biomass. Here we analyse the four decade-long CO2-enrichment experiments in woody ecosystems that measured total NPP and biomass. CO2 enrichment increased biomass increment by 1.05 ± 0.26 kg C m−2 over a full decade, a 29.1 ± 11.7% stimulation of biomass gain in these early-secondary-succession temperate ecosystems. This response is predictable by combining the CO2 response of NPP (0.16 ± 0.03 kg C m−2 y−1) and the CO2-independent, linear slope between biomass increment and cumulative NPP (0.55 ± 0.17). An ensemble of terrestrial ecosystem models fail to predict both terms correctly. Allocation to wood was a driver of across-site, and across-model, response variability and together with CO2-independence of biomass retention highlights the value of understanding drivers of wood allocation under ambient conditions to correctly interpret and predict CO2 responses.
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