The Boreal Climate

The boreal ecosystem encircles the Earth above about 48° N, covering Alaska, Canada, and Eurasia. It is second in areal extent only to the world’s tropical forests and occupies about 21% of the Earth’s forested land surface (Whittaker and Likins 1975). Nutrient cyding rates are relatively low in the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hall, Forrest G, Betts, Alan K, Frolking, Steve, Brown, Ross, Chen, Jing M, Chen, Wenjun, Halldin, Sven, Lettenmaier, Dennis P, Schafer, Joel
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: University of New Hampshire Scholars' Repository 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholars.unh.edu/earthsci_facpub/365
http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-642-18948-7_8
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Summary:The boreal ecosystem encircles the Earth above about 48° N, covering Alaska, Canada, and Eurasia. It is second in areal extent only to the world’s tropical forests and occupies about 21% of the Earth’s forested land surface (Whittaker and Likins 1975). Nutrient cyding rates are relatively low in the cold wet boreal soils. Whittaker and Likins (1975) estimate the annual net primary productivity of the boreal forest at 800 g C m-2y-1 and its tundra at 140 g C m-2y-1, in contrast to tropical forests averaging 2200 g C m-2y-1 and temperate forests at 1250 g C m-2y-1. However, the relatively low nutrient cyding rates at high latitudes result in relatively high longterm boreal carbon storage rates averaging roughly 30 to 50 g C m-2y-1 (Harden et al. 1992), a result of relatively high root turnover from trees, shrubs and mosses with relatively low decomposition rates. Over the past few thousand years, these below-ground storage processes have created a large and potentially mobile reservoir of carbon in the peats and permafrost of the boreal ecosystem. Currently, the boreal ecosystem is estimated to contain approximately 13% of the Earth’s carbon, stored in the form of above-ground biomass and 43% of the Earth’s carbon stored below-ground in its soils (Schlesinger 1991). Meridional gradients in atmospheric CO2 concentrations suggest that forests above 40° N Sequester as much as 1 to 2 gigatons of carbon annually (Denning et al. 1995; Randerson et al. 1997), or nearly 15 to 30% of that injected into the atmosphere each year through fossil fuel combustion and deforestation. Given the enormous areal extent of the ecosystem, roughly 20 Mkm2 (Sellers et al. 1996b; >Fig. A.45), shifts in carbon flux of as little as 50 g C m-2y-1 can contribute or remove one gigaton of carbon annually from the atmosphere. The size of the boreal forest, its sensitivity to relatively small climatic variations, its influence on global climate and the global carbon cyde, therefore, make it critically important to better understand and ...