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- Title
Increases in atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> have little influence on transpiration of a temperate forest canopy.
- Authors
Tor‐ngern, Pantana; Oren, Ram; Ward, Eric J.; Palmroth, Sari; McCarthy, Heather R.; Domec, Jean‐Christophe
- Abstract
Models of forest energy, water and carbon cycles assume decreased stomatal conductance with elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration ([CO2]) based on leaf-scale measurements, a response not directly translatable to canopies. Where canopy-atmosphere are well-coupled, [CO2]-induced structural changes, such as increasing leaf-area index ( LD), may cause, or compensate for, reduced mean canopy stomatal conductance ( GS), keeping transpiration ( EC) and, hence, runoff unaltered., We investigated GS responses to increasing [CO2] of conifer and broadleaved trees in a temperate forest subjected to 17-yr free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE; + 200 μmol mol−1). During the final phase of the experiment, we employed step changes of [CO2] in four elevated-[CO2] plots, separating direct response to changing [CO2] in the leaf-internal air-space from indirect effects of slow changes via leaf hydraulic adjustments and canopy development., Short-term manipulations caused no direct response up to 1.8 × ambient [CO2], suggesting that the observed long-term 21% reduction of GS was an indirect effect of decreased leaf hydraulic conductance and increased leaf shading. Thus, E C was unaffected by [CO2] because 19% higher canopy LD nullified the effect of leaf hydraulic acclimation on GS., We advocate long-term experiments of duration sufficient for slow responses to manifest, and modifying models predicting forest water, energy and carbon cycles accordingly.
- Subjects
CARBON cycle; FUELWOOD; ELECTRIC admittance; PLANT transpiration; PLANT physiology
- Publication
New Phytologist, 2015, Vol 205, Issue 2, p518
- ISSN
0028-646X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/nph.13148