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Long-term warming increased carbon sequestration capacity in a humid subtropical forest

  • X. Liu
  • , Z. Lie
  • , Peter B. Reich
  • , G. Zhou
  • , J. Yan
  • , W. Huang
  • , Y. Wang
  • , J. Penuelas
  • , David T. Tissue
  • , M. Zhao
  • , T. Wu
  • , D. Wu
  • , W. Xu
  • , Y. Li
  • , X. Tang
  • , S. Zhou
  • , Z. Meng
  • , S. Liu
  • , G. Chu
  • , D. Zhang
  • Q. Zhang, X. He, J. Liu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Tropical and subtropical forests play a crucial role in global carbon (C) pools, and their responses to warming can significantly impact C-climate feedback and predictions of future global warming. Despite earth system models projecting reductions in land C storage with warming, the magnitude of this response varies greatly between models, particularly in tropical and subtropical regions. Here, we conducted a field ecosystem-level warming experiment in a subtropical forest in southern China, by translocating mesocosms (ecosystem composed of soils and plants) across 600 m elevation gradients with temperature gradients of 2.1°C (moderate warming), to explore the response of ecosystem C dynamics of the subtropical forest to continuous 6-year warming. Compared with the control, the ecosystem C stock decreased by 3.8% under the first year of 2.1°C warming; but increased by 13.4% by the sixth year of 2.1°C warming. The increased ecosystem C stock by the sixth year of warming was mainly attributed to a combination of sustained increased plant C stock due to the maintenance of a high plant growth rate and unchanged soil C stock. The unchanged soil C stock was driven by compensating and offsetting thermal adaptation of soil microorganisms (unresponsive soil respiration and enzyme activity, and more stable microbial community), increased plant C input, and inhibitory C loss (decreased C leaching and inhibited temperature sensitivity of soil respiration) from soil drying. These results suggest that the humid subtropical forest C pool would not necessarily diminish consistently under future long-term warming. We highlight that differential and asynchronous responses of plant and soil C processes over relatively long-term periods should be considered when predicting the effects of climate warming on ecosystem C dynamics of subtropical forests.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere17072
Number of pages12
JournalGlobal Change Biology
Volume30
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 13 - Climate Action
    SDG 13 Climate Action

Keywords

  • carbon sequestration capacity
  • carbon stock
  • carbon fluxes
  • warming
  • subtropical forest
  • thermal acclimation

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