The likely impact of elevated [CO 2 ], nitrogen deposition, increased temperature and management on carbon sequestration in temperate and boreal forest ecosystems: a literature review
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences · University of Campania "Luigi Vanvitelli" · +8 more institutions
Abstract
Temperate and boreal forest ecosystems contain a large part of the carbon stored on land, in the form of both biomass and soil organic matter. Increasing atmospheric [CO2], increasing temperature, elevated nitrogen deposition and intensified management will change this C store. Well documented single-factor responses of net primary production are: higher photosynthetic rate (the main [CO2] response); increasing length of growing season (the main temperature response); and higher leaf-area index (the main N deposition and partly [CO2] response). Soil organic matter will increase with increasing litter input, although priming may decrease the soil C stock initially, but litter quality effects should be minimal…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 36.88
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 220
Authors
22Topics & keywords
- Temperate climate
- Ecosystem
- Carbon sequestration
- Environmental science
- Taiga
- Nitrogen
- Boreal
- Carbon sink
- Life in Land