Forests pass water and carbon through while converting portions to streamflow, soil organic matter, wood production, and other ecosystem services. The efficiencies of these transfers are but poorly quantified. New theory and new instruments have made it possible to use stable isotope composition to provide this quantification of efficiencies wherever there is a measurable difference between the branches of a branchpoint. We present a linked conceptual model that relies on isotopes of hydrogen, carbon, and oxygen to describe these branchpoints along the pathway from precipitation to soil and biomass carbon sequestration and illustrate how it can be tested and generalized.
CITATION STYLE
Marshall, J. D., Laudon, H., Mäkelä, A., Peichl, M., Hasselquist, N., & Näsholm, T. (2021, January 1). Isotopic Branchpoints: Linkages and Efficiencies in Carbon and Water Budgets. Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences. Blackwell Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020JG006043
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