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Multi-Decadal Carbon Cycle Measurements Indicate Resistance to External Drivers of Change at the Howland Forest AmeriFlux Site

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TLDR
In this article, the authors have been measuring many aspects of carbon cycling at an unmanaged evergreen forest in central Maine, USA, for over 25 years and found a surprising lack of influence of climate variability on annual carbon storage in this mature forest.
Abstract
A long-standing goal of ecology has been to understand the cycling of carbon in forests. This has taken on new urgency with the need to address a rapidly changing climate. Forests serve as longterm stores for atmospheric CO2, but their continued ability to take up new carbon is dependent on future changes in climate and other factors such as age. We have been measuring many aspects of carbon cycling at an unmanaged evergreen forest in central Maine, USA, for over 25 years. Here we use these data to address questions about the magnitude and control of carbon fluxes and quantify flows and uncertainties between the different pools. A key issue was to assess whether recent climate change and an aging tree population were reducing annual C storage. Total ecosystem C stocks determined from inventory and quantitative soil pits were about 23,300 g C m−2 with 46% in live trees, and 48% in the soil. Annual biomass increment in trees at Howland Forest averaged 161 ± 23 g C m−2 yr−1, not significantly different from annual net ecosystem production (NEP = −NEE) of 211 ± 40 g C m−2 y−1 measured by eddy covariance. Unexpectedly, there was a small but significant trend of increasing C uptake through time in the eddy flux data. This was despite the period of record including some of the most climate-extreme years in the last 125. We find a surprising lack of influence of climate variability on annual carbon storage in this mature forest.

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Tracking vegetation phenology across diverse North American biomes using PhenoCam imagery: A new, publicly-available dataset

TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented a series of datasets, together consisting of almost 750 years of observations, characterizing vegetation phenology in diverse ecosystems across North America, derived from conventional, visible-wavelength, automated digital camera imagery collected through the PhenoCam network, with RGB (red, green, blue) colour channel information, with means and other statistics calculated across a region-of-interest (ROI) delineating a specific vegetation type.

A Simple Two-dimensional Parameterisation for Flux Footprint Predictions

TL;DR: In this paper, a two-dimensional footprint model for flux footprint prediction is proposed, based on a novel scaling approach for the crosswind distribution of the footprint and on an improved version of footprint parameterisation of Kljun et al.

The contribution of nitrogen deposition to the photosynthetic capacity of forests

TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of nitrogen deposition on photosynthetic capacity using eddy covariance measurements was investigated using a global dataset of 80 forest FLUXNET sites, and the authors concluded that N deposition plays an essential role in determining canopy physiology and carbon cycling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Informing Nature‐based Climate Solutions for the United States with the best‐available science

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors propose a research agenda to address the realizable benefits and unintended consequences of nature-based climate solutions (NbCS) using data and tools that have long been used to understand the mechanisms driving ecosystem carbon and energy cycling.
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Wet magmatic processes during the accretion of the deep crust of the Oman Ophiolite paleoridge: Phase diagrams and petrological records

TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluated several experimental studies in hydrous tholeiitic systems performed at shallow pressures and concluded that the wehrlitic phase assemblage (olivine coexisting with clinopyroxene but without plagioclase) is the most significant feature indicative of high prevailing water activities.
References
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Journal Article

Computer-Assisted Quality Control in Tree-Ring Dating and Measurement

TL;DR: In this article, a computer program for objectively checking tree-ring measurement series and aiding in the cross-dating process is presented, which can be used to determine the dating of tree -ring site collections from areas of somewhat difficult crossdating.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Strategy of Ecosystem Development

TL;DR: The principles of ecological succession bear importantly on the relationships between man and nature and needs to be examined as a basis for resolving man’s present environmental crisis.
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