Environmental Studies and ForestryNature Communications
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.
Related Publications
Explore these studies to deepen your understanding
Adjacent work that informs or extends this paper's methodology and findings.
Environmental Studies and Forestry
Warming Temperatures Lead to Reduced Summer Carbon Sequestration in the U.S. Corn Belt
Z. Yu, T. J. Griffis, et al.
Engineering and Technology
Breaking the hard-to-abate bottleneck in China's path to carbon neutrality with clean hydrogen
X. Yang, C. P. Nielsen, et al.
Agriculture
Using insurance data to quantify the multidimensional impacts of warming temperatures on yield risk
E. D. Perry, J. Yu, et al.
Environmental Studies and Forestry
Plant height as an indicator for alpine carbon sequestration and ecosystem response to warming
Q. Quan, N. He, et al.

