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Boreal conifers maintain carbon uptake with warming despite failure to track optimal temperatures

Environmental Studies and Forestry

Boreal conifers maintain carbon uptake with warming despite failure to track optimal temperatures

M. E. Dusenge, J. M. Warren, et al.

This study reveals that warming is shifting the thermal optimum of net photosynthesis in mature boreal conifers, although not at the pace of rising temperatures. Conducted by a team of researchers including Mirindi Eric Dusenge and Jeffrey M. Warren, it highlights how these trees can thermally acclimate to maintain carbon uptake amidst climate change.... show more
Abstract
Warming shifts the thermal optimum of net photosynthesis (ToptA) to higher temperatures. However, our knowledge of this shift is mainly derived from seedlings grown in greenhouses under ambient atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) conditions. It is unclear whether shifts in ToptA of field-grown trees will keep pace with the temperatures predicted for the 21st century under elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Here, using a whole-ecosystem warming controlled experiment under either ambient or elevated CO2 levels, we show that ToptA of mature boreal conifers increased with warming. However, shifts in ToptA did not keep pace with warming as ToptA only increased by 0.26–0.35 °C per 1 °C of warming. Net photosynthetic rates estimated at the mean growth temperature increased with warming in elevated CO2 spruce, while remaining constant in ambient CO2 spruce and in both ambient CO2 and elevated CO2 tamarack with warming. Although shifts in ToptA of these two species are insufficient to keep pace with warming, these boreal conifers can thermally acclimate photosynthesis to maintain carbon uptake in future air temperatures.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Aug 03, 2023
Authors
Mirindi Eric Dusenge, Jeffrey M. Warren, Peter B. Reich, Eric J. Ward, Bridget K. Murphy, Artur Stefanski, Raimundo Bermudez, Marisol Cruz, David A. McLennan, Anthony W. King, Rebecca A. Montgomery, Paul J. Hanson, Danielle A. Way
Tags
thermal optimum
net photosynthesis
boreal conifers
warming
CO2 levels
thermal acclimation
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