Moving towards carbon neutrality: CO2 exchange of a black spruce forest ecosystem during the first 10 years of recovery after harvest

Author:

Coursolle Carole1,Giasson Marc-André1,Margolis Hank A.1,Bernier Pierre Y.2

Affiliation:

1. Centre d’étude de la forêt, Faculté de foresterie, de géographie et de géomatique, 2405 rue de la Terrasse, Université Laval, Laval, QC G1V 0A6, Canada.

2. Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service - Laurentian Forestry Centre, P.O. 10380, Quebec, QC G1V 4C7, Canada.

Abstract

Disturbances control the landscape-level C dynamics of boreal forests, but post-disturbance C dynamics are usually poorly quantified. In the current study, we use 10 years of CO2 flux measurements at a boreal black spruce ( Picea mariana (Mill.) B.S.P.) cutover in eastern Canada to estimate time to C neutrality, quantify the relative role of respiration versus photosynthesis during recovery, and determine the agreement between cumulated CO2 fluxes and plot-level changes in C content. The site was a net source of 139 g C·m–2·year–1 2 years post-harvest, dropped further to a source of 173 g C·m–2·year–1 4 years post-harvest, following a scarification treatment, and was nearly C neutral 10 years post-harvest. Gross ecosystem productivity (GEP) increased by 50 g C·m–2·year–1 post-scarification, while ecosystem respiration (ER) increased by only 23 g C·m–2·year–1. The resulting net rate of increase of 27 g C·m–2·year–1 in net ecosystem productivity was driven by changes in increasing leaf area. In fact, vegetation regrowth had a much greater impact on annual fluxes than did interannual variability in climate. Biometric-based measurements of total C losses after harvest were in relatively good agreement with eddy-covariance-based estimates 8 years after the harvest.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Ecology,Forestry,Global and Planetary Change

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