Data from: Contrasting impacts of short- and long-term large herbivore exclusion on understory net CO2 exchange in a boreal forest
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https://datadryad.org/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.hmgqnk9pv
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资源简介:
Across boreal forests, trees are the main living biomass carbon (C) stock,
but the understory vegetation can contribute significantly to the C
cycling and net forest carbon dioxide (CO2) balance. The patchy understory
vegetation which consists of sunlit (i.e., lichen-like) and shaded
habitats (i.e., dwarf shrub-like) is often altered by ungulate grazers.
Grazers may influence understory CO2 exchange, and consequently, the
forest CO2 balance. Grazing affects differently the biomass of slow
growing lichens compared to the faster growing mosses and dwarf shrubs,
and therefore the effects of grazing on CO2 exchange in the patchy
understory vegetation could vary temporally. We studied how excluding
grazing for short- and long-term affects the CO2 exchange and vegetation
biomass in the understory of an oligotrophic Scots pine forest. We
measured growing season (2019, 2020) CO2 exchange across sunlit and shaded
habitats inside fences that had excluded large grazers for 0–1 and 25–26
years and in the adjacent grazed area. In addition, we measured the height
of understory vegetation. We found that short-term grazer exclusion
increased ecosystem CO2 source fluxes only in the shaded habitats.
However, long-term exclusion of grazing decreased CO2 net release
regardless of the habitat type. Furthermore, grazer exclusion increased
moss depth immediately which coincided with an abrupt intensification of
CO2 net release. Considering the impacts of grazing over both short- and
long-term may help to forecast C fluxes more accurately which may be
relevant for informed climate solutions regionally and even on a larger
scale.
提供机构:
Dryad
创建时间:
2023-10-11



