| Literature DB >> 24967601 |
Wenping Yuan1, Shuguang Liu2, Wenjie Dong3, Shunlin Liang4, Shuqing Zhao5, Jingming Chen6, Wenfang Xu7, Xianglan Li8, Alan Barr9, T Andrew Black10, Wende Yan11, Mike L Goulden12, Liisa Kulmala13, Anders Lindroth14, Hank A Margolis15, Yojiro Matsuura16, Eddy Moors17, Michiel van der Molen18, Takeshi Ohta19, Kim Pilegaard20, Andrej Varlagin21, Timo Vesala22.
Abstract
The satellite-derived normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), which is used for estimating gross primary production (GPP), often includes contributions from both mosses and vascular plants in boreal ecosystems. For the same NDVI, moss can generate only about one-third of the GPP that vascular plants can because of its much lower photosynthetic capacity. Here, based on eddy covariance measurements, we show that the difference in photosynthetic capacity between these two plant functional types has never been explicitly included when estimating regional GPP in the boreal region, resulting in a substantial overestimation. The magnitude of this overestimation could have important implications regarding a change from a current carbon sink to a carbon source in the boreal region. Moss abundance, associated with ecosystem disturbances, needs to be mapped and incorporated into GPP estimates in order to adequately assess the role of the boreal region in the global carbon cycle.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24967601 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms5270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919