The Fate of Carbon in a Mature Forest Under Carbon Dioxide Enrichment
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Atmospheric carbon dioxide enrichment (eCO) can enhance plant carbon uptake and growth, thereby providing an important negative feedback to climate change by slowing the rate of increase of the atmospheric CO concentration. Although evidence gathered from young aggrading forests has generally indicated a strong CO fertilization effect on biomass growth, it is unclear whether mature forests respond to eCO in a similar way. In mature trees and forest stands, photosynthetic uptake has been found to increase under eCO without any apparent accompanying growth response, leaving the fate of additional carbon fixed under eCO unclear. Here using data from the first ecosystem-scale Free-Air CO Enrichment (FACE) experiment in a mature forest, we constructed a comprehensive ecosystem carbon budget to track the fate of carbon as the forest responded to four years of eCO exposure. We show that, although the eCO treatment of +150 parts per million (+38 per cent) above ambient levels induced a 12 per cent (+247 grams of carbon per square metre per year) increase in carbon uptake through gross primary production, this additional carbon uptake did not lead to increased carbon sequestration at the ecosystem level. Instead, the majority of the extra carbon was emitted back into the atmosphere via several respiratory fluxes, with increased soil respiration alone accounting for half of the total uptake surplus. Our results call into question the predominant thinking that the capacity of forests to act as carbon sinks will be generally enhanced under eCO, and challenge the efficacy of climate mitigation strategies that rely on ubiquitous CO fertilization as a driver of increased carbon sinks in global forests.
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