Phenology of Photosynthesis in Winter‐Dormant Temperate and Boreal Forests: Long‐Term Observations From Flux Towers and Quantitative Evaluation of Phenology Models

Author:

Bowling David R.1ORCID,Schädel Christina23,Smith Kenneth R.1ORCID,Richardson Andrew D.34ORCID,Bahn Michael5,Arain M. Altaf6ORCID,Varlagin Andrej7ORCID,Ouimette Andrew P.8,Frank John M.9,Barr Alan G.10,Mammarella Ivan11ORCID,Šigut Ladislav12ORCID,Foord Vanessa13ORCID,Burns Sean P.1415ORCID,Montagnani Leonardo16ORCID,Litvak Marcy E.17ORCID,Munger J. William18ORCID,Ikawa Hiroki19,Hollinger David Y.8ORCID,Blanken Peter D.14ORCID,Ueyama Masahito20ORCID,Matteucci Giorgio21,Bernhofer Christian22,Bohrer Gil23ORCID,Iwata Hiroki24ORCID,Ibrom Andreas25,Pilegaard Kim25,Spittlehouse David L.13,Kobayashi Hideki26ORCID,Desai Ankur R.27ORCID,Staebler Ralf M.28ORCID,Black T. Andrew29

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences University of Utah Salt Lake City UT USA

2. Woodwell Climate Research Center Falmouth MA USA

3. Center for Ecosystem Science and Society Northern Arizona University Flagstaff AZ USA

4. School of Informatics, Computing, and Cyber Systems Northern Arizona University Flagstaff AZ USA

5. Institute of Ecology, University of Innsbruck Innsbruck Austria

6. School of Earth, Environment & Society McMaster University Hamilton ON Canada

7. A.N Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences Moscow Russia

8. U. S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Northern Research Station Durham NH USA

9. U. S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Rocky Mountain Research Station Ft. Collins CO USA

10. Global Institute for Water Security, University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon SK Canada

11. Institute of Atmospheric and Earth System Research/Physics, Faculty of Science University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

12. Global Change Research Institute CAS Brno Czech Republic

13. British Columbia Ministry of Forests Prince George BC Canada

14. Department of Geography University of Colorado Boulder CO USA

15. National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder CO USA

16. Faculty of Agricultural, Environmental and Food Sciences Free University of Bolzano Bolzano Italy

17. Department of Biology University of New Mexico Albuquerque NM USA

18. Harvard University Cambridge MA USA

19. Hokkaido Agricultural Research Center National Agriculture and Food Research Organization Hokkaido Japan

20. Graduate School of Agriculture Osaka Metropolitan University Osaka Japan

21. National Research Council of Italy, Institute of BioEconomy Sesto Fiorentino Italy

22. Chair of Meteorology Institute of Hydrology and Meteorology, Faculty of Environmental Sciences, Technische Universität Dresden Dresden Germany

23. Ohio State University Columbus OH USA

24. Department of Environmental Science Shinshu University Matsumoto Japan

25. Technical University of Denmark Kgs. Lyngby Denmark

26. Research Institute for Global Change, Japan Agency for Marine‐Earth Science and Technology Yokosuka Japan

27. University of Wisconsin‐Madison Madison WI USA

28. Air Quality Processes Section Environment and Climate Change Canada Gatineau QC Canada

29. Faculty of Land & Food Systems University of British Columbia Vancouver BC Canada

Abstract

AbstractWe examined the seasonality of photosynthesis in 46 evergreen needleleaf (evergreen needleleaf forests (ENF)) and deciduous broadleaf (deciduous broadleaf forests (DBF)) forests across North America and Eurasia. We quantified the onset and end (StartGPP and EndGPP) of photosynthesis in spring and autumn based on the response of net ecosystem exchange of CO2 to sunlight. To test the hypothesis that snowmelt is required for photosynthesis to begin, these were compared with end of snowmelt derived from soil temperature. ENF forests achieved 10% of summer photosynthetic capacity ∼3 weeks before end of snowmelt, while DBF forests achieved that capacity ∼4 weeks afterward. DBF forests increased photosynthetic capacity in spring faster (1.95% d−1) than ENF (1.10% d−1), and their active season length (EndGPP–StartGPP) was ∼50 days shorter. We hypothesized that warming has influenced timing of the photosynthesis season. We found minimal evidence for long‐term change in StartGPP, EndGPP, or air temperature, but their interannual anomalies were significantly correlated. Warmer weather was associated with earlier StartGPP (1.3–2.5 days °C−1) or later EndGPP (1.5–1.8 days °C−1, depending on forest type and month). Finally, we tested whether existing phenological models could predict StartGPP and EndGPP. For ENF forests, air temperature‐ and daylength‐based models provided best predictions for StartGPP, while a chilling‐degree‐day model was best for EndGPP. The root mean square errors (RMSE) between predicted and observed StartGPP and EndGPP were 11.7 and 11.3 days, respectively. For DBF forests, temperature‐ and daylength‐based models yielded the best results (RMSE 6.3 and 10.5 days).

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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