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Controls on isoprene emission from trees in a subtropical dry forest
Authors:M. LERDAU  M. KELLER
Affiliation:Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY 11794-5245, USA;International Institute for Tropical Forestry, United States Forest Service, Call Box 25000, Rio Piedras, PR 00928-2500, USA
Abstract:Isoprene emission from vegetation is the single most important source of photochemically active reduced compounds to the atmosphere. We present the first controlled-environment measurements of isoprene emission from leaves of tropical forest trees. Our studies were conducted in the Guanica State Forest in Puerto Rico. We report the effects of temperature and light variations on biogenic isoprene emissions during 1995. Maximum emission rates varied among species from 0 to 268 nmol m?2 s?1. Values at the upper end of this range of maximum emission rates are 2–3 times higher than values reported from any temperate taxa. Isoprene emission showed strong sensitivity to light and temperature variations. In contrast to temperate plants, whose emissions tend to saturate at a light intensity of ~1000 μmol m?2 s?1, emissions from the tropical species increased with light intensity up to 2500 μmol m?2 s?1. The temperature optima for emissions from these plants were similar to those previously reported for temperate plants: ~40 °C. The high maximum emission rates and lack of light saturation indicate that estimates of isoprene emission from tropical forests need to be revised upwards.
Keywords:carbon dioxide    emission    gas chromatography    global models, infrared gas analysis    isoprene    light response curve    photo-ionization detector    temperature response curve    tropical dry forest
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