Joint control of terrestrial gross primary productivity by plant phenology and physiology

Jianyang Xia(University of Oklahoma), Shuli Niu(Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research), Philippe Ciais(Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement), Ivan A. Janssens(University of Antwerp), Jiquan Chen(Michigan State University), Christof Ammann(Agroscope), M. Altaf Arain(McMaster University), Peter D. Blanken(University of Colorado Boulder), Alessandro Cescatti(Joint Research Centre), Damien Bonal(Université de Lorraine), Nina Buchmann, Peter S. Curtis(The Ohio State University), Shiping Chen(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Jinwei Dong(University of Oklahoma), Lawrence B. Flanagan(University of Lethbridge), Christian Frankenberg(Jet Propulsion Laboratory), Teodoro Georgiadis(Istituto di Biometeorologia), Christopher M. Gough(Virginia Commonwealth University), Dafeng Hui(Tennessee State University), Gerard Kiely(University College Cork), Jianwei Li(Tennessee State University), Magnus Lund(Aarhus University), Vincenzo Magliulo(Istituto per il Sistema Produzione Animale in Ambiente Mediterraneo), Barbara Marcolla(Fondazione Edmund Mach), Lutz Merbold, Leonardo Montagnani(Free University of Bozen-Bolzano), Eddy Moors(Wageningen University & Research), Jørgen E. Olesen(Aarhus University), Shilong Piao(Peking University), A. Raschi(Istituto di Biometeorologia), Olivier Roupsard(Centro Agronomico Tropical de Investigacion y Ensenanza Catie), Andrew E. Suyker(University of Nebraska–Lincoln), Marek Urbaniak(University of Life Sciences in Poznań), Francesco Primo Vaccari(Istituto di Biometeorologia), Andrej Varlagin(Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution), Timo Vesala(University of Helsinki), Matthew Wilkinson(Forest Research), Ensheng Weng(Princeton University), Georg Wohlfahrt(Eurac Research), Liming Yan(Fudan University), Yiqi Luo(University of Oklahoma)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
February 17, 2015
Cited by 430Open Access
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Abstract

Terrestrial gross primary productivity (GPP) varies greatly over time and space. A better understanding of this variability is necessary for more accurate predictions of the future climate-carbon cycle feedback. Recent studies have suggested that variability in GPP is driven by a broad range of biotic and abiotic factors operating mainly through changes in vegetation phenology and physiological processes. However, it is still unclear how plant phenology and physiology can be integrated to explain the spatiotemporal variability of terrestrial GPP. Based on analyses of eddy-covariance and satellite-derived data, we decomposed annual terrestrial GPP into the length of the CO2 uptake period (CUP) and the seasonal maximal capacity of CO2 uptake (GPPmax). The product of CUP and GPPmax explained >90% of the temporal GPP variability in most areas of North America during 2000-2010 and the spatial GPP variation among globally distributed eddy flux tower sites. It also explained GPP response to the European heatwave in 2003 (r(2) = 0.90) and GPP recovery after a fire disturbance in South Dakota (r(2) = 0.88). Additional analysis of the eddy-covariance flux data shows that the interbiome variation in annual GPP is better explained by that in GPPmax than CUP. These findings indicate that terrestrial GPP is jointly controlled by ecosystem-level plant phenology and photosynthetic capacity, and greater understanding of GPPmax and CUP responses to environmental and biological variations will, thus, improve predictions of GPP over time and space.


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