TY - JOUR
T1 - Low historical nitrogen deposition effect on carbon sequestration in the boreal zone
AU - Fleischer, K.
AU - Wårlind, D.
AU - van der Molen, M. K.
AU - Rebel, K. T.
AU - Arneth, A.
AU - Erisman, J. W.
AU - Wassen, M. J.
AU - Smith, B.
AU - Gough, C. M.
AU - Margolis, H. A.
AU - Cescatti, A.
AU - Montagnani, L.
AU - Arain, A.
AU - Dolman, A. J.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - Nitrogen (N) cycle dynamics and N deposition play an important role in determining the terrestrial biosphere’s carbon (C) balance. We assess global and biome-specific N deposition effects on C sequestration rates with the dynamic global vegetation model LPJ-GUESS. Modeled CN interactions are evaluated by comparing predictions of the C and CN version of the model with direct observations of C fluxes from 68 forest FLUXNET sites. N limitation on C uptake reduced overestimation of gross primary productivity for boreal evergreen needleleaf forests from 56% to 18%, presenting the greatest improvement among forest types. Relative N deposition effects on C sequestration (dC/dN) in boreal, temperate, and tropical sites ranged from 17 to 26 kg C kgN_1 whenmodeled at site scale andwere reduced to 12–22 kg C kgN_1 at global scale. We find that 19% of the recent (1990–2007) and 24% of the historical global C sink (1900–2006) was driven by N deposition effects. While boreal forests exhibit highest dC/dN, their N deposition-induced C sink was relatively low and is suspected to stay low in the future as no major changes in N deposition rates are expected in the boreal zone. N deposition induced a greater C sink in temperate and tropical forests, while predicted C fluxes and N-induced C sink response in tropical forests were associated with greatest uncertainties. Future work should be directed at improving the ability of LPJ-GUESS and other process-based ecosystem models to reproduce C cycle dynamics in the tropics, facilitated by more benchmarking data sets. Furthermore, efforts should aim to improve understanding and model representations of N availability (e.g., N fixation and organic N uptake), N limitation, P cycle dynamics, and effects of anthropogenic land use and land cover changes.
AB - Nitrogen (N) cycle dynamics and N deposition play an important role in determining the terrestrial biosphere’s carbon (C) balance. We assess global and biome-specific N deposition effects on C sequestration rates with the dynamic global vegetation model LPJ-GUESS. Modeled CN interactions are evaluated by comparing predictions of the C and CN version of the model with direct observations of C fluxes from 68 forest FLUXNET sites. N limitation on C uptake reduced overestimation of gross primary productivity for boreal evergreen needleleaf forests from 56% to 18%, presenting the greatest improvement among forest types. Relative N deposition effects on C sequestration (dC/dN) in boreal, temperate, and tropical sites ranged from 17 to 26 kg C kgN_1 whenmodeled at site scale andwere reduced to 12–22 kg C kgN_1 at global scale. We find that 19% of the recent (1990–2007) and 24% of the historical global C sink (1900–2006) was driven by N deposition effects. While boreal forests exhibit highest dC/dN, their N deposition-induced C sink was relatively low and is suspected to stay low in the future as no major changes in N deposition rates are expected in the boreal zone. N deposition induced a greater C sink in temperate and tropical forests, while predicted C fluxes and N-induced C sink response in tropical forests were associated with greatest uncertainties. Future work should be directed at improving the ability of LPJ-GUESS and other process-based ecosystem models to reproduce C cycle dynamics in the tropics, facilitated by more benchmarking data sets. Furthermore, efforts should aim to improve understanding and model representations of N availability (e.g., N fixation and organic N uptake), N limitation, P cycle dynamics, and effects of anthropogenic land use and land cover changes.
KW - atmospheric deposition
KW - carbon sequestration
KW - nitrogen cycle
KW - nitrogen dioxide
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:48501
U2 - 10.1002/2015JG002988
DO - 10.1002/2015JG002988
M3 - Article
SN - 2169-8953
VL - 120
SP - 2542
EP - 2561
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
IS - 12
ER -