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Net ecosystem productivity of boreal jack pine stands regenerating from clearcutting under current and future climates
Authors:R. F. GRANT,A. G. BARR&dagger  ,T. A. BLACK&Dagger  ,D. GAUMONT-GUAY&Dagger  ,H. IWASHITA§  ,J. KIDSON&dagger  ,H. McCAUGHEY,¶  ,K. MORGENSTERN&Dagger  ,S. MURAYAMA§  ,Z. NESIC&Dagger  ,N. SAIGUSA§  ,A. SHASHKOV&#  , T. ZHA&dagger  
Affiliation:Department of Renewable Resources, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada T6G 2E3,;Climate Research Branch, Meteorological Service of Canada Saskatoon, SK, Canada S7N 3H5,;Department of Soil Science, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 1Z4,;National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST), Tsukuba 305-8569, Japan,;Department of Geography, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada K7L 3N6,;Science and Technology Branch, Environment Canada, Toronto, ON, Canada M3H 5T4
Abstract:Life cycle analysis of climate and disturbance effects on forest net ecosystem productivity (NEP) is necessary to assess changes in forest carbon (C) stocks under current or future climates. Ecosystem models used in such assessments need to undergo well-constrained tests of their hypotheses for climate and disturbance effects on the processes that determine CO2 exchange between forests and the atmosphere. We tested the ability of the model ecosys to simulate diurnal changes in CO2 fluxes under changing air temperatures (Ta) and soil water contents during forest regeneration with eddy covariance measurements over boreal jack pine (Pinus banksiana) stands along a postclearcut chronosequence. Model hypotheses for hydraulic and nutrient constraints on CO2 fixation allowed ecosys to simulate the recovery of C cycling during the transition of boreal jack pine stands from C sources following clearcutting (NEP from −150 to −200 g C m−2 yr−1) to C sinks at maturity (NEP from 20 to 80 g C m−2 yr−1) with large interannual variability. Over a 126-year logging cycle, annualized NEP, C harvest, and net biome productivity (NBP=NEP–harvest removals) of boreal jack pine averaged 47, 33 and 14 g C m−2 yr−1. Under an IPCC SRES climate change scenario, rising Ta exacerbated hydraulic constraints that adversely affected NEP of boreal jack pine after 75 years. These adverse effects were avoided in the model by replacing the boreal jack pine ecotype with one adapted to warmer Ta. This replacement raised annualized NEP, C harvest, and NBP to 81, 56 and 25 g C m−2 yr−1 during a 126-year logging cycle under the same climate change scenario.
Keywords:clearcutting    climate change    ecosys    forest regeneration    modelling    net biome productivity    net ecosystem productivity
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