Rangeland Ecology & Management

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Productivity, Respiration, and Light-Response Parameters of World Grassland and Agroecosystems Derived From Flux-Tower Measurements
Author
Gilmanov, Tagir G.
Airess, L.
Barcza, Z.
Baron, V. S.
Belelli, L.
Beringer, J.
Billesbach, D.
Bonal, D.
Bradford, J.
Ceschia, E.
Cook, D.
Carradi, C.
Frank, A.
Gianelle, D.
Gimeno, C.
Gruenwald, T.
Guo, Haiqiang
Hanan, N.
Haszpra, L.
Heilman, J.
Jacobs, A.
Jones, M. B.
Johnson, D. A.
|Kiely, G.
Li, Shenggong
Magliulo, V.
Moors, E.
Nagy, Z.
Nasyrov, M.
Owensby, C.
Pinter, K.
Pio, C.
Reichstein, M.
Sanz, M. J.
Scott, R.
Soussana, J. F.
Stoy, P. C.
Svejcar, T.
Tuba, Z.
Zhou, Guangsheng
Publisher
Society for Range Management
Publication Year
2010-01-01
Body

Grasslands and agroecosystems occupy one-third of the terrestrial area, but their contribution to the global carbon cycle remains uncertain. We used a set of 316 site-years of CO2 exchange measurements to quantify gross primary productivity, respiration, and light-response parameters of grasslands, shrublands/savanna, wetlands, and cropland ecosystems worldwide. We analyzed data from 72 global flux-tower sites partitioned into gross photosynthesis and ecosystem respiration with the use of the light-response method (Gilmanov, T. G., D. A. Johnson, and N. Z. Saliendra. 2003. Growing season CO2 fluxes in a sagebrush-steppe ecosystem in Idaho: Bowen ratio/energy balance measurements and modeling. Basic and Applied Ecology 4:167-183) from the RANGEFLUX and WORLDGRASSAGRIFLUX data sets supplemented by 46 sites from the FLUXNET La Thuile data set partitioned with the use of the temperature-response method (Reichstein, M., E. Falge, D. Baldocchi, D. Papale, R. Valentini, M. Aubinet, P. Berbigier, C. Bernhofer, N. Buchmann, M. Falk, T. Gilmanov, A. Granier, T. Grünwald, K. Havránková, D. Janous, A. Knohl, T. Laurela, A. Lohila, D. Loustau, G. Matteucci, T. Meyers, F. Miglietta, J. M. Ourcival, D. Perrin, J. Pumpanen, S. Rambal, E. Rotenberg, M. Sanz, J. Tenhunen, G. Seufert, F. Vaccari, T. Vesala, and D. Yakir. 2005. On the separation of net ecosystem exchange into assimilation and ecosystem respiration: review and improved algorithm. Global Change Biology 11:1424-1439). Maximum values of the quantum yield (a = 75 mmol mol-1), photosynthetic capacity (Amax = 3.4 mg CO2 m-2 s-1), gross photosynthesis (Pg, max = 116 g CO2 m-2 d-1), and ecological light-use efficiency (eecol = 59 mmol mol-1) of managed grasslands and high-production croplands exceeded those of most forest ecosystems, indicating the potential of nonforest ecosystems for uptake of atmospheric CO2. Maximum values of gross primary production (8 600 g CO2 m-2 yr-1), total ecosystem respiration (7 900 g CO2 m-2 yr-1), and net CO2 exchange (2 400 g CO2 m-2 yr-1) were observed for intensively managed grasslands and high-yield crops, and are comparable to or higher than those for forest ecosystems, excluding some tropical forests. On average, 80% of the nonforest sites were apparent sinks for atmospheric CO2, with mean net uptake of 700 g CO2 m-2 yr-1 for intensive grasslands and 933 g CO2 m-2 d-1 for croplands. However, part of these apparent sinks is accumulated in crops and forage, which are carbon pools that are harvested, transported, and decomposed off site. Therefore, although agricultural fields may be predominantly sinks for atmospheric CO2, this does not imply that they are necessarily increasing their carbon stock.  The Rangeland Ecology & Management archives are made available by the Society for Range Management and the University of Arizona Libraries. Contact lbry-journals@email.arizona.edu for further information. Migrated from OJS platform August 2020

Language
en
Resource Type
Text
Document Type
Journal Issue/Article
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.2111/REM-D-09-00072.1
Additional Information
Gilmanov, T. G., Aires, L., Barcza, Z., Baron, V. S., Belelli, L., Beringer, J., ... & Zhou, G. (2010). Productivity, respiration, and light-response parameters of world grassland and agroecosystems derived from flux-tower measurements. Rangeland Ecology & Management, 63(1), 16-39.
IISN
0022-409X
OAI Identifier
oai:repository.arizona.edu:10150/642762
Journal Volume
63
Journal Number
1
Journal Pages
16-39
Journal Name
Rangeland Ecology & Management
Keywords
cropland
ecosystem respiration
grasslands
gross primary reduction
light-response function method
net CO2 flux partitioning
net ecosystem CO2 exchange