Long-term warming increased carbon sequestration capacity in a humid subtropical forest

Xujun Liu, Zhiyang Lie, Peter B. Reich, Guoyi Zhou, Junhua Yan, Wenjuan Huang, Yingping Wang, Josep Peñuelas, David T. Tissue, Mengdi Zhao, Ting Wu, Donghai Wu, Wenfang Xu, Yuelin Li, Xuli Tang, Shuyidan Zhou, Ze Meng, Shizhong Liu, Guowei Chu, Deqiang ZhangQianmei Zhang, Xinhua He, Juxiu Liu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Tropical and subtropical forests play a crucial role in global carbon (C) pools, and their responses to warming can significantly impact C-climate feedback and predictions of future global warming. Despite earth system models projecting reductions in land C storage with warming, the magnitude of this response varies greatly between models, particularly in tropical and subtropical regions. Here, we conducted a field ecosystem-level warming experiment in a subtropical forest in southern China, by translocating mesocosms (ecosystem composed of soils and plants) across 600 m elevation gradients with temperature gradients of 2.1°C (moderate warming), to explore the response of ecosystem C dynamics of the subtropical forest to continuous 6-year warming. Compared with the control, the ecosystem C stock decreased by 3.8% under the first year of 2.1°C warming; but increased by 13.4% by the sixth year of 2.1°C warming. The increased ecosystem C stock by the sixth year of warming was mainly attributed to a combination of sustained increased plant C stock due to the maintenance of a high plant growth rate and unchanged soil C stock. The unchanged soil C stock was driven by compensating and offsetting thermal adaptation of soil microorganisms (unresponsive soil respiration and enzyme activity, and more stable microbial community), increased plant C input, and inhibitory C loss (decreased C leaching and inhibited temperature sensitivity of soil respiration) from soil drying. These results suggest that the humid subtropical forest C pool would not necessarily diminish consistently under future long-term warming. We highlight that differential and asynchronous responses of plant and soil C processes over relatively long-term periods should be considered when predicting the effects of climate warming on ecosystem C dynamics of subtropical forests.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere17072
JournalGlobal change biology
Volume30
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2024
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Keywords

  • carbon fluxes
  • carbon sequestration capacity
  • carbon stock
  • subtropical forest
  • thermal acclimation
  • warming

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