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Title: GROSS PRIMARY PRODUCTION IS STIMULATED FOR THREE POPULUS SPECIES GROWN UNDER FREE-AIR CO2 ENRICHMENT FROM PLANTING THROUGH CANOPY CLOSURE

Author
item WITTIG, VICTORIA - UNIV ILLINOIS- URBANIA
item BERNACCHI, CARL - ILLINOIS WATER SURVEY
item ZHU, XIN-GUANG - UNIV ILLINOIS- URBANIA
item CALFAPIETRA, CARLO - UNIVERSITY OF TUSCIA
item CEULEMANS, REINHART - UNIVERSITY OF ANTWERP
item DEANGELIS, PAOLO - UNIVERSITY OF TUSCIA
item GIELEN, BIRGIT - UNIVERSITY OF ANTWERP
item MIGLIETTA, FRANCO - IAEA, NRC
item Morgan, Patrick
item LONG, STEPHEN - UNIV ILLINOIS- URBANIA

Submitted to: Global Change Biology
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 12/23/2004
Publication Date: 3/18/2005
Citation: Wittig, V.E., Bernacchi, C.J., Zhu, X., Calfapietra, C., Ceulemans, R., Deangelis, P., Gielen, B., Miglietta, F., Morgan, P.B., Long, S.P. 2005. Gross primary production is stimulated for three populus species grown under free-air co2 enrichment from planting through canopy closure. Global Change Biology.

Interpretive Summary: Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration ([CO2]) is rising and the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projects it will reach 550 parts per million by the middle of this century (currently 372 parts per million). Current projections of both future global [CO2] and agronomic resources rely upon computer simulations of both current and future plant growth estimates. With increased precision of current assessments and computer models, more accurate predictions of future plant growth can be made. Three different Poplar species were grown in fumigation system that allows for alteration of the [CO2] without the use of chambers (Free-Air CO2 enrichement; FACE) in Viterbo, Italy. Using measurements of the immediate climatic conditions (temperature, humidity, etc.) within the plots, estimates of leaf carbon uptake (photosynthesis) could be made which were subsequently feed into a second predictive model with measurement of total leaf area (LAI) to estimate total carbon uptake by the trees over three growing seasons. Elevated [CO2] stimulated total carbon uptake in all three years, however the greatest difference was between current and elevated [CO2] treatments was found in the first year and it decreased thereafter. There was a significant difference in the response to elevated [CO2] between tree species with the hybrid poplar euramericana having the greatest response to elevated [CO2]. The results were compared to independent harvest measurement of tree material in the plots and these simulated results were consistent with these measurements. This simulation can be used to accurately assess tree responses to changes in atmospheric [CO2].

Technical Abstract: How forests will respond to rising [CO2] in the long term is uncertain, most studies having involved juvenile trees in chambers prior to canopy closure. Poplar free-air CO2 enrichment (Viterbo, Italy) is one of the first experiments to grow a forest from planting through canopy closure to coppice, entirely under open-air conditions using free-air CO2 enrichment technology. Three Populus species: P. alba, P. nigra and P. x euramericana, were grown in three blocks, each containing one control and one treatment plot in which CO2 was elevated to the expected 2050 concentration of 550 ppm. The objective of this study was to estimate gross primary production (GPP) from recorded leaf photosynthetic properties, leaf area index (LAI) and meteorological conditions over the complete 3-year rotation cycle. From the meteorological conditions recorded at 30 min intervals and biweekly measurements of LAI, the microclimate of leaves within the plots was estimated with a radiation transfer and energy balance model. This information was in turn used as input into a canopy microclimate model to determine light and temperature of different leaf classes at 30 min intervals which in turn was used with the steady-state biochemical model of leaf photosynthesis to compute CO2 uptake by the different leaf classes. The parameters of these models were derived from measurements made at regular intervals throughout the coppice cycle. The photosynthetic rates for different leaf classes were summed to obtain canopy photosynthesis, i.e. GPP. The model was run for each species in each plot, so that differences in GPP between species and treatments could be tested statistically. Significant stimulation of GPP driven by elevated [CO2] occurred in all 3 years, and was greatest in the first year (223–251%), but markedly lower in the second (19–24%) and third years (5–19%). Increase in GPP in elevated relative to control plots was highest for P. nigra in 1999 and for P. x euramericana in 2000 and 2001, although in 1999 P. alba had a higher GPP than P. x euramericana. Our analysis attributed the decline in stimulation to canopy closure and not photosynthetic acclimation. Over the 3-year rotation cycle from planting to harvest, the cumulative GPP was 4500, 4960 and 4010 gCm-2 for P. alba, P. nigra and P. x euramericana, respectively, in current [CO2] and 5260, 5800 and 5000 gCm-2 in the elevated [CO2] treatments. The relative changes were consistent with independent measurements of net primary production, determined independently from biomass increments and turnover.