Carbon flux to woody tissues in a beech/spruce forest during summer and in response to chronic O 3 exposure

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Abstract

The present study compares the dynamics in carbon (C) allocation of adult deciduous beech (Fagus sylvatica) and evergreen spruce (Picea abies) during summer and in response to seven-year-long exposure with twice-ambient ozone (O 3) concentrations (2 × O 3). Focus was on the respiratory turn-over and translocation of recent photosynthates at various positions along the stems, coarse roots and soils. The hypotheses tested were that (1) 2 × O 3 decreases the allocation of recent photosynthates to CO 2 efflux of stems and coarse roots of adult trees, and that (2) according to their different O 3 sensitivities this effect is stronger in beech than in spruce. Labeling of whole tree canopies was applied by releasing 13C depleted CO 2 (δ 13C of -46.9‰) using a free-air stable carbon isotope approach. Canopy air δ 13C was reduced for about 2.5 weeks by ca. 8‰ in beech and 6‰ in spruce while the increase in CO 2 concentration was limited to about 110 μl l-1 and 80 μl l-1, respectively. At the end of the labeling period, δ 13C of stem CO 2 efflux and phloem sugars was reduced to a similar extend by ca. 3-4‰ (beech) and ca. 2-3‰ (spruce). The fraction of labeled C (fE,new) in stem CO 2 efflux amounted to 0.3 to 0.4, indicating slow C turnover of the respiratory supply system in both species. Elevated O 3 slightly stimulated the allocation of recently fixed photosynthates to stem and coarse root respiration in spruce (rejection of hypothesis I for spruce), but resulted in a significant reduction in C flux in beech (acceptance of hypotheses I and II). The distinct decrease in C allocation to beech stems indicates the potential of chronic O 3 stress to substantially mitigate the C sink strength of trees on the long-term scale. © Author(s) 2011.

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Ritter, W., Andersen, C. P., Matyssek, R., & Grams, T. E. E. (2011). Carbon flux to woody tissues in a beech/spruce forest during summer and in response to chronic O 3 exposure. Biogeosciences, 8(11), 3127–3138. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-8-3127-2011

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