Ecological processes dominate the ¹³C land disequilibrium in a Rocky Mountain subalpine forest
Fossil fuel combustion has increased atmospheric CO₂ by ~ 115 µmol mol-1 since 1750 and decreased its carbon isotope composition (δ¹³C) by 1.7-2‰ (the ¹³C Suess effect). Because carbon is stored in the terrestrial biosphere for decades and longer, the δ¹³C of CO₂ released by terrestrial ecosystems is expected to differ from the δ¹³C of CO₂ assimilated by land plants during photosynthesis. This isotopic difference between land-atmosphere respiration (δR) and photosynthetic assimilation (δA) fluxes gives rise to the ¹³C land disequilibrium (D). Contemporary understanding suggests that over annual and longer time scales, D is determined primarily by the Suess effect, and thus, D is generally positive (δR > δA). A 7 year record of biosphere-atmosphere carbon exchange was used to evaluate the seasonality of δA and δR, and the ¹³C land disequilibrium, in a subalpine conifer forest. A novel isotopic mixing model was employed to determine the δ¹³
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2016-01-01T00:00:00Z
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Copyright 2014 American Geophysical Union.
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