![]() In the course of photosynthesis, plants bind carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. While the carbon dioxide is taken up through the open stomata of their leaves, water vapor is released. The ratio between the transpired water and bound carbon, so-called water use efficiency, is an indicator of the ecosystem's function and plays a key role in the global water, energy, and carbon cycle. For the first time, a team of scientists, including the Head of the Atmospheric Environmental Research Division of the KIT Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research (IMK-IFU), Professor Hans Peter Schmid, has now studied the exchange of water and carbon in the ecosystem by means of long-term field measurements. Evaluation of the measurements reveals a significant increase in water use efficiency in the past two decades. To explain this development, the researchers analyzed various hypotheses. Apart from the increase in the carbon dioxide concentration, they also considered factors like the increasing availability of nitrogen, changes of the vegetation structure by growth, mechanical and thermal coupling between the crown and the atmosphere, and long-term deviation of measurement systems. "This shows that forests sensitively react to changes of the environment," explains Professor Hans Peter Schmid, who conducts research at KIT's Campus Alpine in Garmisch-Partenkirchen. "Ecosystems have strategies to cope with climate change and to use their resources efficiently." According to Schmid, the increase in water use efficiency of the forests exceeds the assumptions made on the basis of theoretical studies and models. As a result of the increased water use efficiency, the plants need less water in spite of an increased photosynthesis on the ecosystem level. In Schmid's opinion, the results obtained so far from the still ongoing study suggest a shift in the water and carbon budget of the vegetation on Earth. "Probably, the role of stomata on the leaf surface in the interaction between forests and the climate has to be reevaluated and established vegetation-climate models need to be revised." The long-term behavior of ecosystems subject to climate change and the development of appropriate measurement methods are among the central activities of IMK-IFU on KIT's Campus Alpine. ANI First Published: Friday, July 12, 2013, 15:45 ![]() via Science - Google News http://news.google.com/news/url?sa=t&fd=R&usg=AFQjCNH0p4aYzN-5pFM4WWig_DCCc9lqGA&url=http://zeenews.india.com/news/eco-news/how-forest-ecosystems-adapt-to-more-carbon-dioxide_861775.html | |||
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Home »Unlabelled » How Forest ecosystems adapt to more carbon dioxide - Zee News
Friday, 12 July 2013
How Forest ecosystems adapt to more carbon dioxide - Zee News
Debarjun Saha | 04:36 |
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