Literature DB >> 27644012

Partitioning controls on Amazon forest photosynthesis between environmental and biotic factors at hourly to interannual timescales.

Jin Wu1, Kaiyu Guan2,3, Matthew Hayek4, Natalia Restrepo-Coupe1,5, Kenia T Wiedemann1,4, Xiangtao Xu6, Richard Wehr1, Bradley O Christoffersen1,7, Guofang Miao2,8, Rodrigo da Silva9, Alessandro C de Araujo10, Raimundo C Oliviera11, Plinio B Camargo12, Russell K Monson13, Alfredo R Huete5, Scott R Saleska1.   

Abstract

Gross ecosystem productivity (GEP) in tropical forests varies both with the environment and with biotic changes in photosynthetic infrastructure, but our understanding of the relative effects of these factors across timescales is limited. Here, we used a statistical model to partition the variability of seven years of eddy covariance-derived GEP in a central Amazon evergreen forest into two main causes: variation in environmental drivers (solar radiation, diffuse light fraction, and vapor pressure deficit) that interact with model parameters that govern photosynthesis and biotic variation in canopy photosynthetic light-use efficiency associated with changes in the parameters themselves. Our fitted model was able to explain most of the variability in GEP at hourly (R2  = 0.77) to interannual (R2  = 0.80) timescales. At hourly timescales, we found that 75% of observed GEP variability could be attributed to environmental variability. When aggregating GEP to the longer timescales (daily, monthly, and yearly), however, environmental variation explained progressively less GEP variability: At monthly timescales, it explained only 3%, much less than biotic variation in canopy photosynthetic light-use efficiency, which accounted for 63%. These results challenge modeling approaches that assume GEP is primarily controlled by the environment at both short and long timescales. Our approach distinguishing biotic from environmental variability can help to resolve debates about environmental limitations to tropical forest photosynthesis. For example, we found that biotically regulated canopy photosynthetic light-use efficiency (associated with leaf phenology) increased with sunlight during dry seasons (consistent with light but not water limitation of canopy development) but that realized GEP was nonetheless lower relative to its potential efficiency during dry than wet seasons (consistent with water limitation of photosynthesis in given assemblages of leaves). This work highlights the importance of accounting for differential regulation of GEP at different timescales and of identifying the underlying feedbacks and adaptive mechanisms.
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Keywords:  environmental limitation; leaf demography; leaf quality; leaf quantity; light-use efficiency; phenology; physiology; temperature sensitivity on productivity

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27644012     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13509

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  4 in total

1.  Sensitivity of gross primary productivity to climatic drivers during the summer drought of 2018 in Europe.

Authors:  Zheng Fu; Philippe Ciais; Ana Bastos; Paul C Stoy; Hui Yang; Julia K Green; Bingxue Wang; Kailiang Yu; Yuanyuan Huang; Alexander Knohl; Ladislav Šigut; Mana Gharun; Matthias Cuntz; Nicola Arriga; Marilyn Roland; Matthias Peichl; Mirco Migliavacca; Edoardo Cremonese; Andrej Varlagin; Christian Brümmer; Louis Gourlez de la Motte; Silvano Fares; Nina Buchmann; Tarek S El-Madany; Andrea Pitacco; Nadia Vendrame; Zhaolei Li; Caroline Vincke; Enzo Magliulo; Franziska Koebsch
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2020-09-07       Impact factor: 6.237

2.  Forest fragmentation impacts the seasonality of Amazonian evergreen canopies.

Authors:  Matheus Henrique Nunes; José Luís Campana Camargo; Grégoire Vincent; Kim Calders; Rafael S Oliveira; Alfredo Huete; Yhasmin Mendes de Moura; Bruce Nelson; Marielle N Smith; Scott C Stark; Eduardo Eiji Maeda
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-02-17       Impact factor: 14.919

3.  Seasonal Variations of Solar-Induced Fluorescence, Precipitation, and Carbon Dioxide Over the Amazon.

Authors:  Ronald Albright; Abigail Corbett; Xun Jiang; Ellen Creecy; Sally Newman; King-Fai Li; Mao-Chang Liang; Yuk L Yung
Journal:  Earth Space Sci       Date:  2022-01-18       Impact factor: 3.680

4.  Progress in Remote Sensing of Photosynthetic Activity over the Amazon Basin.

Authors:  Celio Helder Resende de Sousa; Thomas Hilker; Richard Waring; Yhasmin Mendes de Moura; Alexei Lyapustin
Journal:  Remote Sens (Basel)       Date:  2017-01-07       Impact factor: 4.848

  4 in total

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