Roles of Climate, Vegetation and Soil in Regulating the Spatial Variations in Ecosystem Carbon Dioxide Fluxes in the Northern Hemisphere

被引:31
作者
Chen, Zhi [1 ,2 ]
Yu, Guirui [1 ]
Ge, Jianping [3 ]
Wang, Qiufeng [1 ]
Zhu, Xianjin [1 ]
Xu, Zhiwei [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Ecosyst Network Observ & Modeling, Chinese Ecosyst Res Network,Synth Res Ctr, Beijing, Peoples R China
[2] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China
[3] Beijing Normal Univ, Coll Life Sci, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China
来源
PLOS ONE | 2015年 / 10卷 / 04期
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
NET PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY; TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS; LONG-TERM; INTERANNUAL VARIABILITY; FOREST ECOSYSTEMS; WATER-VAPOR; EXCHANGE; RESPIRATION; PATTERNS; ENERGY;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0125265
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Climate, vegetation, and soil characteristics play important roles in regulating the spatial variation in carbon dioxide fluxes, but their relative influence is still uncertain. In this study, we compiled data from 241 eddy covariance flux sites in the Northern Hemisphere and used Classification and Regression Trees and Redundancy Analysis to assess how climate, vegetation, and soil affect the spatial variations in three carbon dioxide fluxes (annual gross primary production (AGPP), annual ecosystem respiration (ARE), and annual net ecosystem production (ANEP)). Our results showed that the spatial variations in AGPP, ARE, and ANEP were significantly related to the climate and vegetation factors (correlation coefficients, R = 0.22 to 0.69, P < 0.01) while they were not related to the soil factors (R = -0.11 to 0.14, P > 0.05) in the Northern Hemisphere. The climate and vegetation together explained 60% and 58% of the spatial variations in AGPP and ARE, respectively. Climate factors (mean annual temperature and precipitation) could account for 45-47 % of the spatial variations in AGPP and ARE, but the climate constraint on the vegetation index explained approximately 75 %. Our findings suggest that climate factors affect the spatial variations in AGPP and ARE mainly by regulating vegetation properties, while soil factors exert a minor effect. To more accurately assess global carbon balance and predict ecosystem responses to climate change, these discrepant roles of climate, vegetation, and soil are required to be fully considered in the future land surface models. Moreover, our results showed that climate and vegetation factors failed to capture the spatial variation in ANEP and suggest that to reveal the underlying mechanism for variation in ANEP, taking into account the effects of other factors (such as climate change and disturbances) is necessary.
引用
收藏
页数:14
相关论文
共 58 条
  • [1] [Anonymous], 2012, HARMONIZED WORLD SOI
  • [2] Comparative ecosystem-atmosphere exchange of energy and mass in a European Russian and a central Siberian bog II.: Interseasonal and interannual variability of CO2 fluxes
    Arneth, A
    Kurbatova, J
    Kolle, O
    Shibistova, OB
    Lloyd, J
    Vygodskaya, NN
    Schulze, ED
    [J]. TELLUS SERIES B-CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL METEOROLOGY, 2002, 54 (05): : 514 - 530
  • [3] Comparing CO2 storage and advection conditions at night at different carboeuroflux sites
    Aubinet, M
    Berbigier, P
    Bernhofer, CH
    Cescatti, A
    Feigenwinter, C
    Granier, A
    Grünwald, TH
    Havrankova, K
    Heinesch, B
    Longdoz, B
    Marcolla, B
    Montagnani, L
    Sedlak, P
    [J]. BOUNDARY-LAYER METEOROLOGY, 2005, 116 (01) : 63 - 94
  • [4] Baldocchi D, 2001, B AM METEOROL SOC, V82, P2415, DOI 10.1175/1520-0477(2001)082<2415:FANTTS>2.3.CO
  • [5] 2
  • [6] Breathing of the terrestrial biosphere: lessons learned from a global network of carbon dioxide flux measurement systems
    Baldocchi, Dennis
    [J]. AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF BOTANY, 2008, 56 (01) : 1 - 26
  • [7] Measuring fluxes of trace gases and energy between ecosystems and the atmosphere - the state and future of the eddy covariance method
    Baldocchi, Dennis
    [J]. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2014, 20 (12) : 3600 - 3609
  • [8] SmcHD1, containing a structural-maintenance-of-chromosomes hinge domain, has a critical role in X inactivation
    Blewitt, Marnie E.
    Gendrel, Anne-Valerie
    Pang, Zhenyi
    Sparrow, Duncan B.
    Whitelaw, Nadia
    Craig, Jeffrey M.
    Apedaile, Anwyn
    Hilton, Douglas J.
    Dunwoodie, Sally L.
    Brockdorff, Neil
    Kay, Graham F.
    Whitelaw, Emma
    [J]. NATURE GENETICS, 2008, 40 (05) : 663 - 669
  • [9] Temperature and precipitation control of the spatial variation of terrestrial ecosystem carbon exchange in the Asian region
    Chen, Zhi
    Yu, Guirui
    Ge, Jianping
    Sun, Xiaomin
    Hirano, Takashi
    Saigusa, Nobuko
    Wang, Qiufeng
    Zhu, Xianjin
    Zhang, Yiping
    Zhang, Junhui
    Yan, Junhua
    Wang, Huimin
    Zhao, Liang
    Wang, Yanfen
    Shi, Peili
    Zhao, Fenghua
    [J]. AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY, 2013, 182 : 266 - 276
  • [10] Spatial analysis of growing season length control over net ecosystem exchange
    Churkina, G
    Schimel, D
    Braswell, BH
    Xiao, XM
    [J]. GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2005, 11 (10) : 1777 - 1787