Litcius/Paper detail

Climate change impacts plant carbon balance, increasing mean future carbon use efficiency but decreasing total forest extent at dry range edges

Justin M. Mathias, Anna T. Trugman

2021Ecology Letters36 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Carbon use efficiency (CUE) represents how efficient a plant is at translating carbon gains through gross primary productivity (GPP) into net primary productivity (NPP) after respiratory costs ( R a ). CUE varies across space with climate and species composition, but how CUE will respond to climate change is largely unknown due to uncertainty in R a at novel high temperatures. We use a plant physiological model validated against global CUE observations and LIDAR vegetation canopy height data and find that model‐predicted decreases in CUE are diagnostic of transitions from forests to shrubland at dry range edges. Under future climate scenarios, we show mean growing season CUE increases in core forested areas, but forest extent decreases at dry range edges, with substantial uncertainty in absolute CUE due to uncertainty in R a . Our results highlight that future forest resilience is nuanced and controlled by multiple competing mechanisms.

Topics & Concepts

ShrublandPrimary productionEnvironmental scienceClimate changeCanopyProductivityPlant functional typeAtmospheric sciencesVegetation (pathology)Range (aeronautics)Carbon fibersEcologyCarbon sequestrationCarbon cycleEcosystemAgroforestryCarbon dioxideBiologyMathematicsAlgorithmComposite materialMacroeconomicsEconomicsComposite numberMedicineGeologyMaterials sciencePathologyPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsEcology and Vegetation Dynamics StudiesFire effects on ecosystems