Global decadal variability of plant carbon isotope discrimination and its link to gross primary production

Autor: Rebecca J. Oliver, Deborah Hemming, Heather Graven, Rossella Guerrieri, Iain Colin Prentice, Aliénor Lavergne
Přispěvatelé: Lavergne A., Hemming D., Prentice I.C., Guerrieri R., Oliver R.J., Graven H., Commission of the European Communities
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
0106 biological sciences
ENVIRONMENT SIMULATOR JULES
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Vapour Pressure Deficit
Biodiversity & Conservation
05 Environmental Sciences
Atmospheric sciences
01 natural sciences
Photosynthesis
General Environmental Science
MODEL DESCRIPTION
Global and Planetary Change
Carbon Isotopes
TREE GROWTH
ATMOSPHERIC CO2 CONCENTRATION
Ecology
forest ecosystems
Plants
forest ecosystem
C-13 DISCRIMINATION
Isotopes of carbon
Biodiversity Conservation
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
WATER-USE EFFICIENCY
MESOPHYLL CONDUCTANCE
JULES model
Atmospheric carbon cycle
chemistry.chemical_element
Environmental Sciences & Ecology
Ecology and Environment
Carbon Cycle
Forest ecology
Environmental Chemistry
Ecosystem
TEMPERATURE RESPONSE FUNCTIONS
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
EUROPEAN FORESTS
Science & Technology
land carbon uptake
Primary production
RADIAL GROWTH
06 Biological Sciences
15. Life on land
Carbon Dioxide
gross primary production
carbon isotope discrimination
Plant Leaves
tree rings
chemistry
13. Climate action
Soil water
Environmental science
Carbon
Environmental Sciences
010606 plant biology & botany
Zdroj: Global Change Biology
Popis: Carbon isotope discrimination (Δ13C) in C3 woody plants is a key variable for the study of photosynthesis. Yet how Δ13C varies at decadal scales, and across regions, and how it is related to gross primary production (GPP), are still incompletely understood. Here we address these questions by implementing a new Δ13C modelling capability in the land-surface model JULES incorporating both photorespiratory and mesophyll-conductance fractionations. We test the ability of four leaf-internal CO2 concentration models embedded in JULES to reproduce leaf and tree-ring (TR) carbon isotopic data. We show that all the tested models tend to overestimate average Δ13C values, and to underestimate interannual variability in Δ13C. This is likely because they ignore the effects of soil water stress on stomatal behavior. Variations in post-photosynthetic isotopic fractionations across species, sites and years, may also partly explain the discrepancies between predicted and TR-derived Δ13C values. Nonetheless, the “least-cost” (Prentice) model shows the lowest biases with the isotopic measurements, and lead to improved predictions of canopy-level carbon and water fluxes. Overall, modelled Δ13C trends vary strongly between regions during the recent (1979–2016) historical period but stay nearly constant when averaged over the globe. Photorespiratory and mesophyll effects modulate the simulated global Δ13C trend by 0.0015±0.005‰ and –0.0006±0.001‰ ppm−1, respectively. These predictions contrast with previous findings based on atmospheric carbon isotope measurements. Predicted Δ13C and GPP tend to be negatively correlated in wet-humid and cold regions, and in tropical African forests, but positively related elsewhere. The negative correlation between Δ13C and GPP is partly due to the strong dominant influences of temperature on GPP and vapor pressure deficit on Δ13C in those forests. Our results demonstrate that the combined analysis of Δ13C and GPP can help understand the drivers of photosynthesis changes in different climatic regions.
Databáze: OpenAIRE