Drought stress and tree size determine stem CO2 efflux in a tropical forest

New Phytol. 2018 Jun;218(4):1393-1405. doi: 10.1111/nph.15024. Epub 2018 Feb 3.

Abstract

CO2 efflux from stems (CO2_stem ) accounts for a substantial fraction of tropical forest gross primary productivity, but the climate sensitivity of this flux remains poorly understood. We present a study of tropical forest CO2_stem from 215 trees across wet and dry seasons, at the world's longest running tropical forest drought experiment site. We show a 27% increase in wet season CO2_stem in the droughted forest relative to a control forest. This was driven by increasing CO2_stem in trees 10-40 cm diameter. Furthermore, we show that drought increases the proportion of maintenance to growth respiration in trees > 20 cm diameter, including large increases in maintenance respiration in the largest droughted trees, > 40 cm diameter. However, we found no clear taxonomic influence on CO2_stem and were unable to accurately predict how drought sensitivity altered ecosystem scale CO2_stem , due to substantial uncertainty introduced by contrasting methods previously employed to scale CO2_stem fluxes. Our findings indicate that under future scenarios of elevated drought, increases in CO2_stem may augment carbon losses, weakening or potentially reversing the tropical forest carbon sink. However, due to substantial uncertainties in scaling CO2_stem fluxes, stand-scale future estimates of changes in stem CO2 emissions remain highly uncertain.

Keywords: drought; growth respiration; maintenance respiration; stem CO2 efflux; tropical rainforests; woody tissue respiration.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Carbon Dioxide / metabolism*
  • Cell Respiration
  • Droughts*
  • Forests*
  • Plant Stems / metabolism*
  • Seasons
  • Stress, Physiological*
  • Trees / anatomy & histology*
  • Tropical Climate*

Substances

  • Carbon Dioxide