Drought effects on whole-tree C dynamics in an enclosed tropical rainforest

crossref(2022)

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摘要
<p>Drought exerts a major control on the carbon (C) cycle of terrestrial ecosystems worldwide. However, the mechanisms and processes underpinning ecosystem responses remain uncertain, in particular in diverse, tall-growing ecosystems like tropical rainforests. In such ecosystems, trees are a predominant driver of ecosystem C cycling, as they link the major ecosystem fluxes, photosynthesis and ecosystem respiration through allocation and utilisation of recent assimilated C. Trees respond dynamically to drought, generally by reducing C assimilation and altering investments of recent C into metabolism, defence, growth and storage, which has consequences for the fate of C in the system. However, to date most of our understanding is derived from experiments on small trees and we lack an understanding of how whole-tree C allocation responds in diverse, stratified forest ecosystems.</p><p>To address this knowledge gap, we implemented a 9.5-week experimental drought in the world&#8217;s largest controlled growth facility, the Biosphere 2 Tropical Rainforest in Arizona, US. We continuously measured isotopic CO<sub>2</sub> fluxes of leaves, stem and soil as well as leaf and phloem non-structural carbohydrates across a range of canopy and understory forming trees during pre-drought and drought conditions. To study drought effects on the fate of recent photoassimilates, we labelled the entire ecosystem with a <sup>13</sup>CO<sub>2</sub> pulse during pre-drought and drought conditions and traced the carbon flow in leaf, stem and soil fluxes and non-structural carbohydrates of leaves and phloem.</p><p>Across all studied trees, drought generally reduced CO<sub>2</sub> uptake and metabolic activity in leaves, stems and soil. The phloem transport rates slowed down and the turnover of recent photoassimilates declined. As drought progressed respiration was increasingly fuelled by C reserves, as indicated by isotopic flux dynamics and a depletion of starch pools, particularly in leaves. Drought response patterns of fluxes, carbohydrate pools and C allocation dynamics were highly variable among trees. Interestingly, response diversity was not primarily explained by species identity, but likely related to a combination of functional and structural traits and the trees&#8217; microenvironment within the forest. We conclude that the structural and functional composition of a forest is an important driver for tree C allocation and needs to be considered for understanding the mechanisms underpinning forest C dynamics in response to drought.</p>
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