Litcius/Paper detail

Global climate and nutrient controls of photosynthetic capacity

Yunke Peng, Keith J. Bloomfield, Lucas A. Cernusak, Tomas F. Domingues, I. Colin Prentice

2021Communications Biology61 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract There is huge uncertainty about how global exchanges of carbon between the atmosphere and land will respond to continuing environmental change. A better representation of photosynthetic capacity is required for Earth System models to simulate carbon assimilation reliably. Here we use a global leaf-trait dataset to test whether photosynthetic capacity is quantitatively predictable from climate, based on optimality principles; and to explore how this prediction is modified by soil properties, including indices of nitrogen and phosphorus availability, measured in situ. The maximum rate of carboxylation standardized to 25 °C ( V cmax25 ) was found to be proportional to growing-season irradiance, and to increase—as predicted—towards both colder and drier climates. Individual species’ departures from predicted V cmax25 covaried with area-based leaf nitrogen ( N area ) but community-mean V cmax25 was unrelated to N area , which in turn was unrelated to the soil C:N ratio. In contrast, leaves with low area-based phosphorus ( P area ) had low V cmax25 (both between and within communities), and P area increased with total soil P. These findings do not support the assumption, adopted in some ecosystem and Earth System models, that leaf-level photosynthetic capacity depends on soil N supply. They do, however, support a previously-noted relationship between photosynthesis and soil P supply.

Topics & Concepts

Photosynthetic capacityPhotosynthesisEnvironmental scienceEcosystemNutrientAtmospheric sciencesAgronomyClimate changeEcologyBotanyBiologyGeologyPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsPhotosynthetic Processes and MechanismsClimate variability and models