| Literature DB >> 30135164 |
Xiaojuan Liu1,2, Stefan Trogisch3,4, Jin-Sheng He5, Pascal A Niklaus2, Helge Bruelheide3,4, Zhiyao Tang5, Alexandra Erfmeier6, Michael Scherer-Lorenzen7, Katherina A Pietsch8, Bo Yang9, Peter Kühn10, Thomas Scholten10, Yuanyuan Huang2, Chao Wang5, Michael Staab11, Katrin N Leppert7, Christian Wirth12, Bernhard Schmid13,14, Keping Ma15.
Abstract
Forest ecosystems are an integral component of the global carbon cycle as they take up and release large amounts of C over short time periods (C flux) or accumulate it over longer time periods (C stock). However, there remains uncertainty about whether and in which direction C fluxes and in particular C stocks may differ between forests of high versus low species richness. Based on a comprehensive dataset derived from field-based measurements, we tested the effect of species richness (3-20 tree species) and stand age (22-116 years) on six compartments of above- and below-ground C stocks and four components of C fluxes in subtropical forests in southeast China. Across forest stands, total C stock was 149 ± 12 Mg ha-1 with richness explaining 28.5% and age explaining 29.4% of variation in this measure. Species-rich stands had higher C stocks and fluxes than stands with low richness; and, in addition, old stands had higher C stocks than young ones. Overall, for each additional tree species, the total C stock increased by 6.4%. Our results provide comprehensive evidence for diversity-mediated above- and below-ground C sequestration in species-rich subtropical forests in southeast China. Therefore, afforestation policies in this region and elsewhere should consider a change from the current focus on monocultures to multi-species plantations to increase C fixation and thus slow increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations and global warming.Entities:
Keywords: BEF-China; carbon flux; carbon storage; ecosystem functioning; evergreen broad-leaved forest; forest biodiversity
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30135164 PMCID: PMC6125896 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2018.1240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349