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What drives the seasonality of photosynthesis across the Amazon basin? A cross-site analysis of eddy flux tower measurements from the Brasil flux network

We investigated the seasonal patterns of Amazonian forest photosynthetic activity, and the effects thereon of variations in climate and land-use, by integrating data from a network of ground-based eddy flux towers in Brazil established as part of the ‘Large-Scale Biosphere Atmosphere Experiment in Amazonia’ project. We found that degree of water limitation, as indicated by the seasonality of the ratio of sensible to latent heat flux (Bowen ratio) predicts seasonal patterns of photosynthesis. In equatorial Amazonian forests (5° N–5° S), water limitation is absent, and photosynthetic fluxes (or gross ecosystem productivity, GEP) exhibit high or increasing levels of photosynthetic activity as the dry season progresses, likely a consequence of allocation to growth of new leaves. In contrast, forests along the southern flank of the Amazon, pastures converted from forest, and mixed forest-grass savanna, exhibit dry-season declines in GEP, consistent with increasing degrees of water limitation. Although previous work showed tropical ecosystem evapotranspiration (ET) is driven by incoming radiation, GEP observations reported here surprisingly show no or negative relationships with photosynthetically active radiation (PAR). Instead, GEP fluxes largely followed the phenology of canopy photosynthetic capacity (Pc), with only deviations from this primary pattern driven by variations in PAR. Estimates of leaf flush at three non-water limited equatorial forest sites peak in the dry season, in correlation with high dry season light levels. The higher photosynthetic capacity that follows persists into the wet season, driving high GEP that is out of phase with sunlight, explaining the negative observed relationship with sunlight. Overall, these patterns suggest that at sites where water is not limiting, light interacts with adaptive mechanisms to determine photosynthetic capacity indirectly through leaf flush and litterfall seasonality. These mechanisms are poorly represented in ecosystem models, and represent an important challenge to efforts to predict tropical forest responses to climatic variations.
- University of Technology Sydney Australia
- University of Arizona United States
- State University of New York at Potsdam United States
- Universidade de São Paulo Brazil
- Boston College United States
active radiation, Land-use Change, Eddy covariance, 551, co2 flux, Tropical forest, Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences, Photosynthesis, Evapotranspiration, leaf-area, Biological Sciences, Phenology, Cross-site, Light Effect, covariance, Solar Radiation, Eddy Covariance, tropical forest, rain-forest, Life on Land, net ecosystem exchange, Climate Change, Latent Heat Flux, Litterfall, Climate Effect, Tropical Forest, Ecosystem productivity, Amazon, climate, Amazon Basin, carbon balance, Forest Ecosystem, Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences, Brasil, Seasonality, gross primary production, Net Ecosystem Production, Earth Sciences, Ecosystem Modeling
active radiation, Land-use Change, Eddy covariance, 551, co2 flux, Tropical forest, Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences, Photosynthesis, Evapotranspiration, leaf-area, Biological Sciences, Phenology, Cross-site, Light Effect, covariance, Solar Radiation, Eddy Covariance, tropical forest, rain-forest, Life on Land, net ecosystem exchange, Climate Change, Latent Heat Flux, Litterfall, Climate Effect, Tropical Forest, Ecosystem productivity, Amazon, climate, Amazon Basin, carbon balance, Forest Ecosystem, Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences, Brasil, Seasonality, gross primary production, Net Ecosystem Production, Earth Sciences, Ecosystem Modeling
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