Record Details

Seasonal hydrology explains interannual and seasonal variation in carbon and water exchange in a semiarid mature ponderosa pine forest in central Oregon

ScholarsArchive at Oregon State University

Field Value
Title Seasonal hydrology explains interannual and seasonal variation in carbon and water exchange in a semiarid mature ponderosa pine forest in central Oregon
Names Thomas, Christoph (creator)
Law, Beverly E. (creator)
Irvine, James (creator)
Martin, Jonathan (creator)
Pettijohn, J. Cory (creator)
Davis, Kent J. (creator)
Date Issued 2009-11-10 (iso8601)
Note Copyrighted by American Geophysical Union.
Abstract We analyzed 7 years (2002–2008) of micrometeorological and concurrent biological
observations of carbon and water fluxes at a mature ponderosa pine forest in central
Oregon in a semiarid climate. We sought to evaluate the extent that gross primary
productivity, net ecosystem exchange, ecosystem respiration, net primary productivity, net
ecosystem productivity, tree transpiration, and evapotranspiration varied seasonally and
interannually in this ecosystem subjected to varying periods and severity of droughts. To
explain variation, we found it necessary to define seasons functionally within a
hydroecological year rather than by fixed calendar dates. The interannual variability in
growing season length was large (45 days), and the end date was more variable than the
onset. Plant-available soil water was the main determinant of carbon fluxes. Spring
evapotranspiration primarily used shallow water, whereas summer and fall
evapotranspiration drew water from deeper in the soil profile. A multiyear drought
(2001–2003) had a more severe and fundamentally different impact on carbon and water
cycles than a single-year (2005) drought because of carryover effects in soil water and
carbohydrate reserves in plant tissue. Calendar year–based analysis was inadequate to
diagnose drought years in precipitation and ecosystem drought response. Extension of
meteorological records back to 1982 showed that anomalies were coherent across the
region and that the observations represented below-average precipitation and
above-average temperatures coherent with a warm-phase Pacific Decadal Oscillation. The
carbon sink of this seasonally water-limited ecosystem is anticipated to increase with
increasing available soil water during the growing season.
Genre Article
Topic carbon exchange
Identifier Thomas, C. K., B. E. Law, J. Irvine, J. G. Martin, J. C. Pettijohn, and K. J. Davis (2009), Seasonal hydrology explains interannual and seasonal variation in carbon and water exchange in a semiarid mature ponderosa pine forest in central Oregon, J. Geophys. Res., 114, G04006.

© Western Waters Digital Library - GWLA member projects - Designed by the J. Willard Marriott Library - Hosted by Oregon State University Libraries and Press