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Predicting ecosystem carbon balance in a warming Arctic: the importance of long‐term thermal acclimation potential and inhibitory effects of light on respiration
Authors:Blair C McLaughlin  Cheng‐Yuan Xu  Edward B Rastetter  Kevin L Griffin
Institution:1. Department of Integrative Biology, University of California at Berkeley, , Berkeley, CA, 94720 USA;2. Environmental Futures Research Institute, Griffith University, , Nathan, Qld, 4111 Australia;3. Faculty of Science, Health, Education and Engineering, University of the Sunshine Coast, , Maroochydore, DC Qld, 4558 Australia;4. The Ecosystems Center, Marine Biological Laboratory, , Woods Hole, MA, 02543 USA;5. Departments of Earth and Environmental Sciences and Ecology, Evolution and Environmental Biology, Columbia University, , New York, NY, 10027 USA;6. Lamont‐Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, , Palisades, NY, 10964 USA
Abstract:The carbon balance of Arctic ecosystems is particularly sensitive to global environmental change. Leaf respiration (R), a temperature‐dependent key process in determining the carbon balance, is not well‐understood in Arctic plants. The potential for plants to acclimate to warmer conditions could strongly impact future global carbon balance. Two key unanswered questions are (1) whether short‐term temperature responses can predict long‐term respiratory responses to growth in elevated temperatures and (2) to what extent the constant daylight conditions of the Arctic growing season inhibit leaf respiration. In two dominant Arctic species E riophorum vaginatum (tussock grass) and B etula nana (woody shrub), we assessed the extent of respiratory inhibition in the light (R L/R D), respiratory response to short‐term temperature change, and respiratory acclimation to long‐term warming treatments. We found that R of both species is strongly inhibited by light (averaging 35% across all measurement temperatures). In E . vaginatum both R L and R D acclimated to the long‐term warming treatment, reducing the magnitude of respiratory response relative to the short‐term response to temperature increase. In B . nana, both R L and R D responded to short‐term temperature increase but showed no acclimation to the long‐term warming. The ability to predict plant respiratory response to global warming with short‐term temperature responses will depend on species‐specific acclimation potential and the differential response of R L and R D to temperature. With projected woody shrub encroachment in Arctic tundra and continued warming, changing species dominance between these two functional groups, may impact ecosystem respiratory response and carbon balance.
Keywords:acclimation  Arctic  Betula nana  climate change  Eriophorum vaginatum  Kok effect  tundra
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