Temperature thresholds of ecosystem respiration at a global scale

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  • Alice S. A. Johnston
  • Andrew Meade
  • Jonas Ardo
  • Nicola Arriga
  • Andy Black
  • Peter D. Blanken
  • Damien Bonal
  • Christian Brummer
  • Alessandro Cescatti
  • Jiri Dusek
  • Alexander Graf
  • Beniamino Gioli
  • Ignacio Goded
  • Christopher M. Gough
  • Hiroki Ikawa
  • Rachhpal Jassal
  • Hideki Kobayashi
  • Vincenzo Magliulo
  • Giovanni Manca
  • Leonardo Montagnani
  • Fernando E. Moyano
  • Jorgen E. Olesen
  • Torsten Sachs
  • Changliang Shao
  • Georg Wohlfahrt
  • Sebastian Wolf
  • William Woodgate
  • Andrej Varlagin
  • Chris Venditti

Ecosystem respiration is a major component of the global terrestrial carbon cycle and is strongly influenced by temperature. The global extent of the temperature-ecosystem respiration relationship, however, has not been fully explored. Here, we test linear and threshold models of ecosystem respiration across 210 globally distributed eddy covariance sites over an extensive temperature range. We find thresholds to the global temperature-ecosystem respiration relationship at high and low air temperatures and mid soil temperatures, which represent transitions in the temperature dependence and sensitivity of ecosystem respiration. Annual ecosystem respiration rates show a markedly reduced temperature dependence and sensitivity compared to half-hourly rates, and a single mid-temperature threshold for both air and soil temperature. Our study indicates a distinction in the influence of environmental factors, including temperature, on ecosystem respiration between latitudinal and climate gradients at short (half-hourly) and long (annual) timescales. Such climatological differences in the temperature sensitivity of ecosystem respiration have important consequences for the terrestrial net carbon sink under ongoing climate change.

The authors test for temperature dependency of ecosystem respiration rates across globally distributed eddy covariance sites, revealing consistent temperature thresholds where ecosystem metabolism changes.

Original languageEnglish
JournalNature Ecology & Evolution
Volume5
Issue number4
Pages (from-to)487-494
Number of pages13
ISSN2397-334X
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

ID: 261380765