Data di Pubblicazione:
2005
Abstract:
We present carbon stable isotope, d13C, results from air and organic matter samples
collected during 98 individual field campaigns across a network of Carboeuroflux forest
sites in 2001 (14 sites) and 2002 (16 sites). Using these data, we tested the hypothesis that
d13C values derived from large-scale atmospheric measurements and models, which are
routinely used to partition carbon fluxes between land and ocean, and potentially
between respiration and photosynthesis on land, are consistent with directly measured
ecosystem-scale d13C values. In this framework, we also tested the potential of d13C in
canopy air and plant organic matter to record regional-scale ecophysiological patterns.
Our network estimates for the mean d13C of ecosystem respired CO2 and the related
'discrimination' of ecosystem respiration, der and Der, respectively, were 25.6 1.9% and
17.8 2.0% in 2001 and 26.6 1.5% and 19.0 1.6% in 2002. The results were in close
agreement with d13C values derived from regional-scale atmosphericmeasurement programs
for 2001, but less so in 2002, which had an unusual precipitation pattern. This suggests that
regional-scale atmospheric sampling programs generally capture ecosystem d13C signals
over Europe, but may be limited in capturing some of the interannual variations.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
CO2 fluxes; ecosystem carbon budget; isotopic discrimination
Elenco autori:
Rossi, Federica
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