MacResearch.org highlights Ben Bond-Lamberty's findings published in Nature. The modeling work was performed on OpenMacGrid.
November 2007 Archives
Changes in climate, atmospheric carbon dioxide
concentration and fire regimes have been occurring for decades in the
global boreal forest, with future climate change likely to increase fire
frequency -- the primary disturbance agent in most boreal forests.
Previous attempts to assess quantitatively the effect of changing
environmental conditions on the net boreal forest carbon balance have
not taken into account the competition between different vegetation
types on a large scale. Here we use a process model with three competing
vascular and non-vascular vegetation types to examine the effects of
climate, carbon dioxide concentrations and fire disturbance on net biome
production, net primary production and vegetation dominance in 100 Mha
of Canadian boreal forest. We find that the carbon balance of this
region was driven by changes in fire disturbance from 1948 to 2005.
Climate changes affected the variability, but not the mean, of the
landscape carbon balance, with precipitation exerting a more significant
effect than temperature. We show that more frequent and larger fires in
the late twentieth century resulted in deciduous trees and mosses
increasing production at the expense of coniferous trees. Our model did
not however exhibit the increases in total forest net primary production
that have been inferred from satellite data. We find that poor soil
drainage decreased the variability of the landscape carbon balance,
which suggests that increased climate and hydrological changes have the
potential to affect disproportionately the carbon dynamics of these
areas. Overall, we conclude that direct ecophysiological changes
resulting from global climate change have not yet been felt in this
large boreal region. Variations in the landscape carbon balance and
vegetation dominance have so far been driven largely by increases in
fire frequency.
Bond-Lamberty, Ben, Scott D. Peckham, Douglas E. Ahl, Stith T. Gower. 2007. Fire as the dominant driver of central Canadian boreal forest carbon balance. Nature, 450, 89-93.
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