Deciduous forests use carbon more efficiently than evergreen forests

Author:

Luo Xiangzhong1ORCID,Zhao Ruiying2,Chu Housen3,Collalti Alessio4ORCID,Fatichi SimoneORCID,Keenan Trevor5ORCID,Lu Xinchen6,Nguyen Ngoc6,Prentice Iain7ORCID,Sun Wu8ORCID,Yu Liyao1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geography, National University of Singapore

2. Department of Geography, National University of Singapore, Singapore.

3. Climate and Ecosystem Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

4. National Research Council of Italy

5. UC Berkeley

6. Department of Environment Science, Policy and Management, University of California, Berkeley

7. Imperial College London

8. Carnegie Institution for Science

Abstract

Abstract

Terrestrial ecosystems have been serving as a strong carbon sink that offsets one quarter of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. Carbon use efficiency (CUE), the percentage of photosynthesized carbon that is available for biomass production and other secondary carbon products, is one factor determining the carbon sink size. The global variation in CUE remains unclear, however, as recent reports disagree over the responses of CUE to temperature, dryness, forest types and stand age, and there are limited direct observations to constrain the related uncertainty. Here, we propose to infer CUE from spatially distributed observations of land-atmosphere CO2 exchange from global eddy covariance sites based on first principles of ecosystem respiration - photosynthesis coupling. Across 2737 site-years, CUE derived from eddy covariance observations is 0.43 ± 0.11, consistent with previous inventory-based estimates (0.46 ± 0.12, n = 244) but with a better representation of spatial-temporal variation in CUE. We find that CUE consistently decreases with temperature, precipitation, light availability and stand age, with a significant difference in the baseline CUE among biomes. Importantly, CUE of deciduous forests is typically 15% higher than that of evergreen forests, suggesting that over long-term deciduous forests are more efficient in using photosynthate. Our study advances the understanding of the global variation in CUE and provides new insights to guide best practices of forest conservation, management, and restoration for carbon sequestration.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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