4.7 Article

Ecosystem Productivity and Evapotranspiration Are Tightly Coupled in Loblolly Pine (Pinus taeda L.) Plantations along the Coastal Plain of the Southeastern US

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f12081123

Keywords

evapotranspiration; gross primary productivity; eddy covariance; coastal plain; loblolly pine plantation; forested wetland; carbon and water coupling

Categories

Funding

  1. USDA NIFA (Multi-agency A.5 Carbon Cycle Science Program) award [2014-67003-22068]
  2. DOE NICCR award [08-SC-NICCR-1072]
  3. USDA Forest Service award [13-JV-11330110-081]
  4. DOE LBNL award [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  5. NIFA [688237, 2014-67003-22068] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The study demonstrates that water use efficiency in loblolly pine plantations varies with stand age, with higher values in younger plantations. Radiation and air temperature have significant impacts on gross primary productivity and evapotranspiration. Drought affects water use efficiency more than evapotranspiration or gross primary productivity. The stability of water use efficiency as stands mature was observed, indicating that pine ecosystem productivity can be predicted from evapotranspiration.
Forest water use efficiency (WUE), the ratio of gross primary productivity (GPP) to evapotranspiration (ET), is an important variable to understand the coupling between water and carbon cycles, and to assess resource use, ecosystem resilience, and commodity production. Here, we determined WUE for managed loblolly pine plantations over the course of a rotation on the coastal plain of North Carolina in the eastern U.S. We found that the forest annual GPP, ET, and WUE increased until age ten, which stabilized thereafter. WUE varied annually (2-44%), being higher at young plantation (YP, 3.12 +/- 1.20 g C kg(-1) H2O d(-1)) compared to a mature plantation (MP, 2.92 +/- 0.45 g C kg(-1) H2O d(-1)), with no distinct seasonal patterns. Stand age was strongly correlated with ET (R-2 = 0.71) and GPP (R-2 = 0.64). ET and GPP were tightly coupled (R-2 = 0.86). Radiation and air temperature significantly affected GPP and ET (R-2 = 0.71 - R-2 = 0.82) at a monthly scale, but not WUE. Drought affected WUE (R-2 = 0.35) more than ET (R-2 = 0.25) or GPP (R-2 = 0.07). A drought enhanced GPP in MP (19%) and YP (11%), but reduced ET 7% and 19% in MP and YP, respectively, resulting in a higher WUE (27-32%). Minor seasonal and interannual variation in forest WUE of MP (age > 10) suggested that forest functioning became stable as stands matured. We conclude that carbon and water cycles in loblolly pine plantations are tightly coupled, with different characteristics in different ages and hydrologic regimes. A stable WUE suggests that the pine ecosystem productivity can be readily predicted from ET and vice versa. The tradeoffs between water and carbon cycling should be recognized in forest management to achieve multiple ecosystem services (i.e., water supply and carbon sequestration).

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