西北太平洋老林和幼林的碳水权衡

IF 8.3 Q1 GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY AGU Advances Pub Date : 2024-07-18 DOI:10.1029/2024AV001188
Michael D. Farinacci, Julia Jones, Lucas C. R. Silva
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摘要

尽管人们对森林中碳与水之间的关系很感兴趣,但很少有研究对不同历史的森林流域中碳积累如何与水利用相匹配进行评估。本研究量化了美国俄勒冈州 H.J. 安德鲁斯实验林区三个小流域(13-22 公顷)中树木的生长、水利用效率以及幼林与成熟/老龄林的碳水权衡。为了量化和标度从树木到流域的碳水权衡,研究人员将树龄记录、遥感绿度和湿度指数与来自幼林流域(树龄在 45 年以上)和成熟/老龄林流域(树龄在 150-500 年)的长期植被、气候和溪流数据相结合。生物量生产与用水密切相关;用水效率(每单位蒸散量的基部面积增量)较低;与树木生长记录始于 19 世纪 50 年代的老龄林相比,幼林人工林的碳水权衡更为陡峭。在 1984 年至 2017 年期间,Landsat 图像中的绿度和湿度指数对溪流或树木生长没有显著的预测作用,不同流域的土壤碳和氮也没有显著差异。多种证据表明,与幼林相比,成熟林和老林流域储存和积累的碳更多,更耐旱,能更好地维持水的供应。这些结果为可能具有广泛适用性的重建和预测提供了基础,因为一阶流域占据了大河流域的 80%-90% ,而且研究流域代表了西北太平洋地区的森林历史。
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Carbon-Water Tradeoffs in Old-Growth and Young Forests of the Pacific Northwest

Despite much interest in relationships among carbon and water in forests, few studies assess how carbon accumulation scales with water use in forested watersheds with varied histories. This study quantified tree growth, water use efficiency, and carbon-water tradeoffs of young versus mature/old-growth forest in three small (13–22 ha) watersheds in the H.J. Andrews Experimental Forest, Oregon, USA. To quantify and scale carbon-water tradeoffs from trees to watersheds, tree-ring records and greenness and wetness indices from remote sensing were combined with long-term vegetation, climate, and streamflow data from young forest watersheds (trees ∼45 years of age) and from a mature/old-growth forest watershed (trees 150–500 years of age). Biomass production was closely related to water use; water use efficiency (basal area increment per unit of evapotranspiration) was lower; and carbon-water tradeoffs were steeper in young forest plantations compared with old-growth forest for which the tree growth record begins in the 1850s. Greenness and wetness indices from Landsat imagery were not significant predictors of streamflow or tree growth over the period 1984 to 2017, and soil C and N did not differ significantly among watersheds. Multiple lines of evidence show that mature and old-growth forest watersheds store and accumulate more carbon, are more drought resistant, and better sustain water availability compared to young forests. These results provide a basis for reconstructions and predictions that are potentially broadly applicable, because first-order watersheds occupy 80%–90% of large river basins and study watersheds are representative of forest history in the Pacific Northwest region.

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