Literature DB >> 30943321

Changes in timing of seasonal peak photosynthetic activity in northern ecosystems.

Taejin Park1, Chi Chen1, Marc Macias-Fauria2, Hans Tømmervik3, Sungho Choi4, Alexander Winkler5,6, Uma S Bhatt7, Donald A Walker8, Shilong Piao9, Victor Brovkin5, Ramakrishna R Nemani10, Ranga B Myneni1.   

Abstract

Seasonality in photosynthetic activity is a critical component of seasonal carbon, water, and energy cycles in the Earth system. This characteristic is a consequence of plant's adaptive evolutionary processes to a given set of environmental conditions. Changing climate in northern lands (>30°N) alters the state of climatic constraints on plant growth, and therefore, changes in the seasonality and carbon accumulation are anticipated. However, how photosynthetic seasonality evolved to its current state, and what role climatic constraints and their variability played in this process and ultimately in carbon cycle is still poorly understood due to its complexity. Here, we take the "laws of minimum" as a basis and introduce a new framework where the timing (day of year) of peak photosynthetic activity (DOYPmax ) acts as a proxy for plant's adaptive state to climatic constraints on its growth. Our analyses confirm that spatial variations in DOYPmax reflect spatial gradients in climatic constraints as well as seasonal maximum and total productivity. We find a widespread warming-induced advance in DOYPmax (-1.66 ± 0.30 days/decade, p < 0.001) across northern lands, indicating a spatiotemporal dynamism of climatic constraints to plant growth. We show that the observed changes in DOYPmax are associated with an increase in total gross primary productivity through enhanced carbon assimilation early in the growing season, which leads to an earlier phase shift in land-atmosphere carbon fluxes and an increase in their amplitude. Such changes are expected to continue in the future based on our analysis of earth system model projections. Our study provides a simplified, yet realistic framework based on first principles for the complex mechanisms by which various climatic factors constrain plant growth in northern ecosystems.
© 2019 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  carbon cycle; climate change; climate constraint; earth system model; eddy covariance; gross primary productivity; law of minimum; photosynthetic seasonality; remote sensing

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30943321     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14638

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


  2 in total

1.  Worldwide impacts of atmospheric vapor pressure deficit on the interannual variability of terrestrial carbon sinks.

Authors:  Bin He; Chen Chen; Shangrong Lin; Wenping Yuan; Hans W Chen; Deliang Chen; Yafeng Zhang; Lanlan Guo; Xiang Zhao; Xuebang Liu; Shilong Piao; Ziqian Zhong; Rui Wang; Rui Tang
Journal:  Natl Sci Rev       Date:  2021-08-20       Impact factor: 17.275

2.  A long-term reconstructed TROPOMI solar-induced fluorescence dataset using machine learning algorithms.

Authors:  Xingan Chen; Yuefei Huang; Chong Nie; Shuo Zhang; Guangqian Wang; Shiliu Chen; Zhichao Chen
Journal:  Sci Data       Date:  2022-07-20       Impact factor: 8.501

  2 in total

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