Solar radiation variation weakened the boost of gross primary production by vegetation restoration in China’s most forestry engineering areas during 2001–2020

Author:

Zhou YanlianORCID,Wei Xiaonan,Wang Yuyan,He WeiORCID,Dong Zhoutong,Zhang Xiaoyu,Liu Yibo,Nguyen Ngoc TuORCID,Ju WeiminORCID

Abstract

Abstract Over the past decades, ecological restoration initiatives in China have made great progress in restoring degraded forests and increasing vegetation coverage, yet the carbon sequestration effects of these initiatives in the context of climate change are not clear. In this study, we assessed the effects of vegetation restoration on gross primary production (GPP) in China’s forestry engineering areas, where large-scale vegetation restoration programmes were launched, during 2001–2020 by disentangling the respective roles of land cover change (LCC), CO2 fertilization, and climate changes using a two-leaf light use efficiency model. We found that LCC attributed by the vegetation restoration dominantly accelerated the increase of GPP in seven out of the eight areas, and CO2 fertilization played a near-equivalent role in all areas. By contrast, the changes in different climate factors contributed to GPP variations diversely. The solar radiation variation greatly inhibited the vegetation GPP over time in seven out of these areas, and the changes in air temperature and vapor pressure deficit regulated GPP inter-annual variations without clear trends in all areas. This study advances our understanding of the contribution of China’s afforestation on its forest GPP in a changing climate, which may help to better manage forests to tackle the challenge of the climate crisis in the future.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

IOP Publishing

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Environmental Science,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment

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