Carbon limitation in trees

1 The ongoing enrichment of the atmosphere with CO2 raises the question of whether growth of forest trees, which represent close to 90 global biomass carbon, is still carbon limited at current concentrations of close to 370 p.p.m. As photosynthesis of C3 plants is not CO2 -saturated at such concentr...

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Main Author: Körner, Christian
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Publications 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A5249122
https://edoc.unibas.ch/8271/
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spelling ftunivbasel:oai:edoc.unibas.ch:8271 2024-09-09T19:59:47+00:00 Carbon limitation in trees Körner, Christian 2003 http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A5249122 https://edoc.unibas.ch/8271/ unknown Publications Körner, Christian. (2003) Carbon limitation in trees. The journal of ecology, Vol. 91, H. 1. pp. 4-17. info:isi/000180744300001 urn:ISSN:0022-0477 info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess Article PeerReviewed 2003 ftunivbasel 2024-06-21T04:18:57Z 1 The ongoing enrichment of the atmosphere with CO2 raises the question of whether growth of forest trees, which represent close to 90 global biomass carbon, is still carbon limited at current concentrations of close to 370 p.p.m. As photosynthesis of C3 plants is not CO2 -saturated at such concentrations, enhanced `source activity` of leaves could stimulate `sink activity` (i.e. growth) of plants, provided other resources and developmental controls permit. I explore current levels of non-structural carbon in trees in natural forests in order to estimate the potential for a carbon-driven stimulation of growth. 2 The concentration of non-structural carbohydrates (NSC) in tree tissues is considered a measure of carbon shortage or surplus for growth. A periodic reduction of NSC pools indicates either that carbon demand exceeds con-current supply, or that both source and sink activity are low. A steady, very high NSC concentration is likely to indicate that photosynthesis fully meets, or even exeeds, that needed for growth (surplus assimilates accumulate). 3 The analysis presented here considers data for mature trees in four climatic zones: the high elevation treeline (in Mexico, the Alps and Northern Sweden), a temperate lowland forest of central Europe, Mediterranean sclerophyllous woodland and a semideciduous tropical forest in Panama. 4 In all four climatic regions, periods of reduced or zero growth show maximum C-loading of trees (source activity exceeding demand), except for dry midsummer in the Mediterranean. NSC pools are generally high throughout the year, and are not significantly affected by mass fruiting episodes. 5 It is concluded that, irrespective of the reason for its periodic cessation, growth does not seem to be limited by carbon supply. Instead, in all the cases examined, sink activity and its direct control by the environment or developmental constraints, restricts biomass production of trees under current ambient CO2 concentrations. 6 The current carbohydrate charging of mature wild trees from ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Northern Sweden University of Basel: edoc
institution Open Polar
collection University of Basel: edoc
op_collection_id ftunivbasel
language unknown
description 1 The ongoing enrichment of the atmosphere with CO2 raises the question of whether growth of forest trees, which represent close to 90 global biomass carbon, is still carbon limited at current concentrations of close to 370 p.p.m. As photosynthesis of C3 plants is not CO2 -saturated at such concentrations, enhanced `source activity` of leaves could stimulate `sink activity` (i.e. growth) of plants, provided other resources and developmental controls permit. I explore current levels of non-structural carbon in trees in natural forests in order to estimate the potential for a carbon-driven stimulation of growth. 2 The concentration of non-structural carbohydrates (NSC) in tree tissues is considered a measure of carbon shortage or surplus for growth. A periodic reduction of NSC pools indicates either that carbon demand exceeds con-current supply, or that both source and sink activity are low. A steady, very high NSC concentration is likely to indicate that photosynthesis fully meets, or even exeeds, that needed for growth (surplus assimilates accumulate). 3 The analysis presented here considers data for mature trees in four climatic zones: the high elevation treeline (in Mexico, the Alps and Northern Sweden), a temperate lowland forest of central Europe, Mediterranean sclerophyllous woodland and a semideciduous tropical forest in Panama. 4 In all four climatic regions, periods of reduced or zero growth show maximum C-loading of trees (source activity exceeding demand), except for dry midsummer in the Mediterranean. NSC pools are generally high throughout the year, and are not significantly affected by mass fruiting episodes. 5 It is concluded that, irrespective of the reason for its periodic cessation, growth does not seem to be limited by carbon supply. Instead, in all the cases examined, sink activity and its direct control by the environment or developmental constraints, restricts biomass production of trees under current ambient CO2 concentrations. 6 The current carbohydrate charging of mature wild trees from ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Körner, Christian
spellingShingle Körner, Christian
Carbon limitation in trees
author_facet Körner, Christian
author_sort Körner, Christian
title Carbon limitation in trees
title_short Carbon limitation in trees
title_full Carbon limitation in trees
title_fullStr Carbon limitation in trees
title_full_unstemmed Carbon limitation in trees
title_sort carbon limitation in trees
publisher Publications
publishDate 2003
url http://edoc.unibas.ch/dok/A5249122
https://edoc.unibas.ch/8271/
genre Northern Sweden
genre_facet Northern Sweden
op_relation Körner, Christian. (2003) Carbon limitation in trees. The journal of ecology, Vol. 91, H. 1. pp. 4-17.
info:isi/000180744300001
urn:ISSN:0022-0477
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
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