山毛榉
水青冈
适应
天蓬
光合作用
问题10
土壤呼吸
环境科学
农学
壳斗科
生物
植物
呼吸
作者
Janisse Deluigi,Christoph Bachofen,Margaux Didion‐Gency,Jonas Gisler,Eugénie Mas,Laura Mekarni,Alvaro Poretti,Marcus Schaub,Yann Vitasse,Charlotte Grossiord
摘要
Tree net carbon (C) uptake may decrease under global warming, as higher temperatures constrain photosynthesis while simultaneously increasing respiration. Thermal acclimation might mitigate this negative effect, but its capacity to do so under concurrent soil drought remains uncertain. Using a 5-yr open-top chamber experiment, we determined acclimation of leaf-level photosynthesis (thermal optimum Topt and rate Aopt) and respiration (rate at 25°C R25 and thermal sensitivity Q10) to chronic +5°C warming, soil drought, and their combination in beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) and oak (Quercus pubescens Willd.) saplings. Process-based modeling was used to evaluate acclimation impacts on canopy-level net C uptake (Atot). Prolonged warming increased Topt by 3.03-2.66°C, but only by 1.58-0.31°C when combined with soil drought, and slightly reduced R25 and Q10. By contrast, drought reduced Topt (-1.93°C in oak), Aopt (c. 50%), and slightly reduced R25 and Q10 (in beech). Mainly because of reduced leaf area, Atot decreased by 47-84% with warming (in beech) and drought, but without additive effects when combined. Our results suggest that, despite photosynthetic and respiratory acclimation to warming and soil drought, canopy-level net C uptake will decline in a persistently hotter and drier climate, primarily due to the prevalent impact of leaf area reduction.
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