To evaluate the carbon budget of a boreal deciduous forest, we measured CO2
fluxes using the eddy covariance technique above an old aspen (OA) forest
in Prince Albert National Park, Saskatchewan, Canada, in 1994 and 1996 as p
art of the Boreal Ecosystem-Atmosphere Study (BOREAS). We found that the OA
forest is a strong carbon sink sequestering 200 +/- 30 and 130 +/- 30 g C
m(-2) y(-1) in 1994 and 1996, respectively. These measurements were 16-25%
lower than an inventory result that the mean carbon increment was about 240
g C m(-2) y(-1) between 1919 and 1994, mainly due to the advanced age of t
he stand at the time of eddy covariance measurements. Assuming these rates
to be representative of Canadian boreal deciduous forests (area approximate
to 3 x 10(5) km(2)), it is likely they can sequester 40-60 Tg C y(-1), whi
ch is 2-3% of the missing global carbon sink.
The difference in carbon sequestration by the OA forest between 1994 and 19
96 was mainly caused by the difference in leaf emergence date. The monthly
mean air temperature during March-May 1994, was 4.8 degrees C higher than i
n 1996, resulting in leaf emergence being 18-24 days earlier in 1994 than 1
996. The warm spring and early leaf emergence in 1994 enabled the aspen for
est to exploit the long days and high solar irradiance of mid-to-late sprin
g. In contrast, the 1996 OA growing season included only 32 days before the
summer solstice. The earlier leaf emergence in 1994 resulted 16% more abso
rbed photosynthetically active radiation and a 90 g C m(-2) y(-1) increase
in photosynthesis than 1996. The concomitant increase in respiration in the
warmer year (1994) was only 20 g C m(-2) y(-1). These results show that an
important control on carbon sequestration by boreal deciduous forests is s
pring temperature, via the influence of air temperature on the timing of le
af emergence.