| Literature DB >> 22404566 |
Shuli Niu1, Yiqi Luo1,2, Shenfeng Fei1, Wenping Yuan3, David Schimel4, Beverly E Law5, Christof Ammann6, M Altaf Arain7, Almut Arneth8,9, Marc Aubinet10, Alan Barr11, Jason Beringer12, Christian Bernhofer13, T Andrew Black14, Nina Buchmann15, Alessandro Cescatti16, Jiquan Chen17, Kenneth J Davis18, Ebba Dellwik19, Ankur R Desai20, Sophia Etzold15, Louis Francois21, Damiano Gianelle22, Bert Gielen23, Allen Goldstein24, Margriet Groenendijk25, Lianhong Gu26, Niall Hanan27, Carole Helfter28, Takashi Hirano29, David Y Hollinger30, Mike B Jones31, Gerard Kiely32, Thomas E Kolb33, Werner L Kutsch34, Peter Lafleur35, David M Lawrence36, Linghao Li37, Anders Lindroth8, Marcy Litvak38, Denis Loustau39, Magnus Lund8, Michal Marek40, Timothy A Martin41, Giorgio Matteucci42, Mirco Migliavacca16, Leonardo Montagnani43,44, Eddy Moors45, J William Munger46, Asko Noormets47, Walter Oechel48, Janusz Olejnik49, Kyaw Tha Paw U50, Kim Pilegaard51, Serge Rambal52, Antonio Raschi53, Russell L Scott54, Günther Seufert16, Donatella Spano55, Paul Stoy56, Mark A Sutton30, Andrej Varlagin57, Timo Vesala58, Ensheng Weng1, Georg Wohlfahrt59, Bai Yang26, Zhongda Zhang1, Xuhui Zhou2.
Abstract
• It is well established that individual organisms can acclimate and adapt to temperature to optimize their functioning. However, thermal optimization of ecosystems, as an assemblage of organisms, has not been examined at broad spatial and temporal scales. • Here, we compiled data from 169 globally distributed sites of eddy covariance and quantified the temperature response functions of net ecosystem exchange (NEE), an ecosystem-level property, to determine whether NEE shows thermal optimality and to explore the underlying mechanisms. • We found that the temperature response of NEE followed a peak curve, with the optimum temperature (corresponding to the maximum magnitude of NEE) being positively correlated with annual mean temperature over years and across sites. Shifts of the optimum temperature of NEE were mostly a result of temperature acclimation of gross primary productivity (upward shift of optimum temperature) rather than changes in the temperature sensitivity of ecosystem respiration. • Ecosystem-level thermal optimality is a newly revealed ecosystem property, presumably reflecting associated evolutionary adaptation of organisms within ecosystems, and has the potential to significantly regulate ecosystem-climate change feedbacks. The thermal optimality of NEE has implications for understanding fundamental properties of ecosystems in changing environments and benchmarking global models.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22404566 DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-8137.2012.04095.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151