Carbon-nitrogen interactions in European forests and semi-natural vegetation - Part 1: Fluxes and budgets of carbon, nitrogen and greenhouse gases from ecosystem monitoring and modelling

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

  • Chris R. Flechard
  • Andreas Ibrom
  • Ute M. Skiba
  • Wim de Vries
  • Marcel van Oijen
  • David R. Cameron
  • Nancy B. Dise
  • Janne F. J. Korhonen
  • Nina Buchmann
  • Arnaud Legout
  • David Simpson
  • Maria J. Sanz
  • Marc Aubinet
  • Denis Loustau
  • Leonardo Montagnani
  • Johan Neirynck
  • Ivan A. Janssens
  • Mari Pihlatie
  • Ralf Kiese
  • Jan Siemens
  • Andre-Jean Francez
  • Juergen Augustin
  • Andrej Varlagin
  • Janusz Olejnik
  • Radoslaw Juszczak
  • Mika Aurela
  • Daniel Berveiller
  • Bogdan H. Chojnicki
  • Ulrich Dammgen
  • Nicolas Delpierre
  • Vesna Djuricic
  • Julia Drewer
  • Eric Dufrene
  • Werner Eugster
  • Yannick Fauvel
  • David Fowler
  • Arnoud Frumau
  • Andre Granier
  • Patrick Gross
  • Yannick Hamon
  • Carole Helfter
  • Arjan Hensen
  • Laszlo Horvath
  • Barbara Kitzler
  • Bart Kruijt
  • Werner L. Kutsch
  • Raquel Lobo-do-Vale
  • Annalea Lohila
  • Bernard Longdoz
  • Michal Marek
  • Giorgio Matteucci
  • Marta Mitosinkova
  • Virginie Moreaux
  • Albrecht Neftel
  • Jean-Marc Ourcival
  • Kim Pilegaard
  • Gabriel Pita
  • Francisco Sanz
  • Maria-Teresa Sebastia
  • Y. Sim Tang
  • Hilde Uggerud
  • Marek Urbaniak
  • Netty van Dijk
  • Timo Vesala
  • Sonja Vidic
  • Caroline Vincke
  • Tamas Weidinger
  • Sophie Zechmeister-Boltenstern
  • Klaus Butterbach-Bah
  • Eiko Nemitz
  • Mark A. Sutton

The impact of atmospheric reactive nitrogen (N-r) deposition on carbon (C) sequestration in soils and biomass of unfertilized, natural, semi-natural and forest ecosystems has been much debated. Many previous results of this dC/dN response were based on changes in carbon stocks from periodical soil and ecosystem inventories, associated with estimates of N-r deposition obtained from large-scale chemical transport models. This study and a companion paper (Flechard et al., 2020) strive to reduce uncertainties of N effects on C sequestration by linking multi-annual gross and net ecosystem productivity estimates from 40 eddy covariance flux towers across Europe to local measurement-based estimates of dry and wet N-r deposition from a dedicated collocated monitoring network. To identify possible ecological drivers and processes affecting the interplay between C and N-r inputs and losses, these data were also combined with in situ flux measurements of NO, N2O and CH4 fluxes; soil NO3- leaching sampling; and results of soil incubation experiments for N and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, as well as surveys of available data from online databases and from the literature, together with forest ecosystem (BAS-FOR) modelling.

Multi-year averages of net ecosystem productivity (NEP) in forests ranged from -70 to 826 gCm(-2) yr(-1) at total wet + dry inorganic N-r deposition rates (N-dep) of 0.3 to 4.3 gNm(-2) yr(-1) and from -4 to 361 g Cm-2 yr(-1) at N-dep rates of 0.1 to 3.1 gNm(-2) yr(-1) in short semi-natural vegetation (moorlands, wetlands and unfertilized extensively managed grasslands). The GHG budgets of the forests were strongly dominated by CO2 exchange, while CH4 and N2O exchange comprised a larger proportion of the GHG balance in short semi-natural vegetation. Uncertainties in elemental budgets were much larger for nitrogen than carbon, especially at sites with elevated N-dep where N-r leaching losses were also very large, and compounded by the lack of reliable data on organic nitrogen and N-2 losses by denitrification. Nitrogen losses in the form of NO, N2O and especially NO3- were on average 27%(range 6 %-54 %) of N-dep at sites with N-dep <1 gNm(-2) yr(-1) versus 65% (range 35 %-85 %) for N-dep > 3 gNm(-2) yr(-1). Such large levels of N-r loss likely indicate that different stages of N saturation occurred at a number of sites. The joint analysis of the C and N budgets provided further hints that N saturation could be detected in altered patterns of forest growth. Net ecosystem productivity increased with N-r deposition up to 2-2.5 gNm(-2) yr(-1), with large scatter associated with a wide range in carbon sequestration efficiency (CSE, defined as the NEP/GPP ratio). At elevated N-dep levels (> 2.5 gNm(-2) yr(-1)), where inorganic N-r losses were also increasingly large, NEP levelled off and then decreased. The apparent increase in NEP at low to intermediate N-dep levels was partly the result of geographical cross-correlations between N-dep and climate, indicating that the actual mean dC/dN response at individual sites was significantly lower than would be suggested by a simple, straightforward regression of NEP vs. N-dep.

Original languageEnglish
JournalBiogeosciences
Volume17
Issue number6
Pages (from-to)1583-1620
Number of pages38
ISSN1726-4170
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

    Research areas

  • LONG-TERM IMPACTS, EDDY-COVARIANCE, REACTIVE NITROGEN, DRY DEPOSITION, ORGANIC NITROGEN, TROPICAL FORESTS, QUALITY-CONTROL, BOREAL FORESTS, OXIDE FLUXES, TREE GROWTH

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