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Simulating the carbon balance of a temperate larch forest under various meteorological conditions

Motomu Toda* 1 email, Masayuki Yokozawa* 2 email, Akihiro Sumida1 email, Tsutomu Watanabe3 email and Toshihiko Hara* 1 email

1Biosphere Dynamics Research Group, Institute of Low Temperature Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0819, Japan

2Department of Global Resources, National Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences, Ibaraki 305-8604, Japan

3Cryosphere Environment Research Group, Institute of Low Temperature Science, Hokkaido University, Saspporo, 060-0819, Japan

author email corresponding author email* Contributed equally

Carbon Balance and Management 2007, 2:6doi:10.1186/1750-0680-2-6

Published: 30 May 2007

Abstract

Background

Changes in the timing of phenological events may cause the annual carbon budget of deciduous forests to change. Therefore, one should take such events into account when evaluating the effects of global warming on deciduous forests. In this article, we report on the results of numerical experiments done with a model that includes a phenological module simulating the timing of bud burst and other phenological events and estimating maximum leaf area index.

Results

This study suggests that the negative effects of warming on tree productivity (net primary production) outweigh the positive effects of a prolonged growing season. An increase in air temperature by 3°C (5°C) reduces cumulative net primary production by 21.3% (34.2%). Similarly, cumulative net ecosystem production (the difference between cumulative net primary production and heterotrophic respiration) decreases by 43.5% (64.5%) when temperatures are increased by 3°C (5°C). However, the positive effects of CO2 enrichment (2 × CO2) outweigh the negative effects of warming (<5°C).

Conclusion

Although the model was calibrated and validated for a specific forest ecosystem, the implications of the study may be extrapolated to deciduous forests in cool-temperate zones. These forests share common features, and it can be conjectured that carbon stocks would increase in such forests in the face of doubled CO2 and increased temperatures as long as the increase in temperature does not exceed 5°C.


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