| Literature DB >> 23869799 |
Bruce A Hungate1, Frank P Day2, Paul Dijkstra1, Benjamin D Duval1,3, C Ross Hinkle4, J Adam Langley5, J Patrick Megonigal6, Peter Stiling7, Dale W Johnson8, Bert G Drake6.
Abstract
Disturbance affects most terrestrial ecosystems and has the potential to shape their responses to chronic environmental change. Scrub-oak vegetation regenerating from fire disturbance in subtropical Florida was exposed to experimentally elevated carbon dioxide (CO₂) concentration (+350 μl l(-1)) using open-top chambers for 11 yr, punctuated by hurricane disturbance in year 8. Here, we report the effects of elevated CO₂ on aboveground and belowground net primary productivity (NPP) and nitrogen (N) cycling during this experiment. The stimulation of NPP and N uptake by elevated CO₂ peaked within 2 yr after disturbance by fire and hurricane, when soil nutrient availability was high. The stimulation subsequently declined and disappeared, coincident with low soil nutrient availability and with a CO₂ -induced reduction in the N concentration of oak stems. These findings show that strong growth responses to elevated CO₂ can be transient, are consistent with a progressively limited response to elevated CO₂ interrupted by disturbance, and illustrate the importance of biogeochemical responses to extreme events in modulating ecosystem responses to global environmental change.Entities:
Keywords: disturbance; elevated CO2; fire; global environmental change; hurricane; net primary productivity (NPP); nitrogen cycling; oak woodland
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23869799 DOI: 10.1111/nph.12409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: New Phytol ISSN: 0028-646X Impact factor: 10.151