M. Diemer et C. Korner, Transient enhancement of carbon uptake in an alpine grassland ecosystem under elevated CO2, ARCTIC A R, 30(4), 1998, pp. 381-387
We investigated the carbon uptake and release of a Central European alpine
grassland community subjected to doubled ambient CO2 during the third (1994
) and fourth (1995) season of CO2 enrichment. Within this period net carbon
uptake under elevated CO2 declined successively, providing evidence of car
bon saturation in this high-elevation environment. Third year data were use
d to calculate a CO2 balance for the 13-wk growing season and indicated tha
t the grassland still served as net carbon sink in 1994. Integrated over th
e growth period, plots exposed to doubled ambient CO2 fixed 22% more CO2 th
an control treatments receiving ambient CO2. Increased carbon uptake under
elevated CO2 was entirely due to a stimulation of daytime net CO2 uptake, s
ince nighttime CO2 release remained unaffected. However, enhancement of net
canopy CO2 uptake showed a distinct seasonal response: following substanti
al net CO2 gains from snowmelt until attainment of peak biomass (ca. 6 wk),
the relative effect of elevated CO2 declined over the remainder of the sea
son. In contrast to controls, the C balance became negative under CO2 enric
hment during the final weeks of the growth period. Estimates of wintertime
respiratory CO2 losses of unfertilized plots (ca, 9 mo during which soils r
emain thawed under the snow) indicate a release of 73 to 89% of the amount
of CO2 fixed during the snow-free period. Under elevated CO2 an estimated m
ean surplus of 41 g C m(-2) accreted during the third year of CO2 enrichmen
t, which we hypothesize must been transferred belowground, since abovegroun
d biomass remained unchanged. Moderate additions of mineral fertilizer (NPK
) alone had a strong positive effect on seasonal net CO2 balance (57% incre
ase) mediated by enhanced plant biomass. NPK-treated plots under elevated C
O2 had a 38% higher seasonal CO2 balance, relative to NPK-plots at ambient
CO2 concentration. Fourth-year (1995) data indicate no further stimulation
of daytime net ecosystem CO2 flux under elevated CO2, both in unfertilized
plots and plots treated with NPK. Hence, it is unlikely that alpine grassla
nds will serve as carbon sinks in a CO2-rich world in the long term.