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Dive into the research topics where Emrys Treasure is active.

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Featured researches published by Emrys Treasure.


New Phytologist | 2010

Hydraulic redistribution of soil water by roots affects whole‐stand evapotranspiration and net ecosystem carbon exchange

Jean-Christophe Domec; John S. King; Asko Noormets; Emrys Treasure; Michael J. Gavazzi; Ge Sun; Steven G. McNulty

*Hydraulic redistribution (HR) of water via roots from moist to drier portions of the soil occurs in many ecosystems, potentially influencing both water use and carbon assimilation. *By measuring soil water content, sap flow and eddy covariance, we investigated the temporal variability of HR in a loblolly pine (Pinus taeda) plantation during months of normal and below-normal precipitation, and examined its effects on tree transpiration, ecosystem water use and carbon exchange. *The occurrence of HR was explained by courses of reverse flow through roots. As the drought progressed, HR maintained soil moisture above 0.15 cm(3) cm(-3) and increased transpiration by 30-50%. HR accounted for 15-25% of measured total site water depletion seasonally, peaking at 1.05 mm d(-1). The understory species depended on water redistributed by the deep-rooted overstory pine trees for their early summer water supply. Modeling carbon flux showed that in the absence of HR, gross ecosystem productivity and net ecosystem exchange could be reduced by 750 and 400 g C m(-2) yr(-1), respectively. *Hydraulic redistribution mitigated the effects of soil drying on understory and stand evapotranspiration and had important implications for net primary productivity by maintaining this whole ecosystem as a carbon sink.


Plant Cell and Environment | 2009

Decoupling the influence of leaf and root hydraulic conductances on stomatal conductance and its sensitivity to vapour pressure deficit as soil dries in a drained loblolly pine plantation

Jean-Christophe Domec; Asko Noormets; John S. King; Ge Sun; Steven G. McNulty; Michael J. Gavazzi; Johnny Boggs; Emrys Treasure

The study examined the relationships between whole tree hydraulic conductance (K(tree)) and the conductance in roots (K(root)) and leaves (K(leaf)) in loblolly pine trees. In addition, the role of seasonal variations in K(root) and K(leaf) in mediating stomatal control of transpiration and its response to vapour pressure deficit (D) as soil-dried was studied. Compared to trunk and branches, roots and leaves had the highest loss of conductivity and contributed to more than 75% of the total tree hydraulic resistance. Drought altered the partitioning of the resistance between roots and leaves. As soil moisture dropped below 50%, relative extractable water (REW), K(root) declined faster than K(leaf). Although K(tree) depended on soil moisture, its dynamics was tempered by the elongation of current-year needles that significantly increased K(leaf) when REW was below 50%. After accounting for the effect of D on g(s), the seasonal decline in K(tree) caused a 35% decrease in g(s) and in its sensitivity to D, responses that were mainly driven by K(leaf) under high REW and by K(root) under low REW. We conclude that not only water stress but also leaf phenology affects the coordination between K(tree) and g(s) and the acclimation of trees to changing environmental conditions.


Tree Physiology | 2012

Interactive effects of nocturnal transpiration and climate change on the root hydraulic redistribution and carbon and water budgets of southern United States pine plantations

Jean-Christophe Domec; Jérôme Ogée; Asko Noormets; Julien Jouangy; Michael J. Gavazzi; Emrys Treasure; Ge Sun; Steve McNulty; John S. King

Deep root water uptake and hydraulic redistribution (HR) have been shown to play a major role in forest ecosystems during drought, but little is known about the impact of climate change, fertilization and soil characteristics on HR and its consequences on water and carbon fluxes. Using data from three mid-rotation loblolly pine plantations, and simulations with the process-based model MuSICA, this study indicated that HR can mitigate the effects of soil drying and had important implications for carbon uptake potential and net ecosystem exchange (NEE), especially when N fertilization is considered. At the coastal site (C), characterized by deep organic soil, HR increased dry season tree transpiration (T) by up to 40%, and such an increase affected NEE through major changes in gross primary productivity (GPP). Deep-rooted trees did not necessarily translate into a large volume of HR unless soil texture allowed large water potential gradients to occur, as was the case at the sandy site (S). At the Piedmont site (P) characterized by a shallow clay-loam soil, HR was low but not negligible, representing up to 10% of T. In the absence of HR, it was predicted that at the C, S and P sites, annual GPP would have been diminished by 19, 7 and 9%, respectively. Under future climate conditions HR was predicted to be reduced by up to 25% at the C site, reducing the resilience of trees to precipitation deficits. The effect of HR on T and GPP was predicted to diminish under future conditions by 12 and 6% at the C and P sites, respectively. Under future conditions, T was predicted to stay the same at the P site, but to be marginally reduced at the C site and slightly increased at the S site. Future conditions and N fertilization would decrease T by 25% at the C site, by 15% at the P site and by 8% at the S site. At the C and S sites, GPP was estimated to increase by 18% and by >70% under future conditions, respectively, with little effect of N fertilization. At the P site, future conditions would stimulate GPP by only 12%, but future conditions plus N fertilization would increase GPP by 24%. As a consequence, in all sites, water use efficiency was predicted to improve dramatically with future conditions. Modeling the effect of reduced annual precipitation indicated that limited water availability would decrease all carbon fluxes, including NEE and respiration. Our simulations highlight the interactive effects of nutrients and elevated CO(2), and showed that the effect of N fertilization would be greater under future climate conditions.


Climatic Change | 2018

Translating national level forest service goals to local level land management: carbon sequestration

Steven G. McNulty; Emrys Treasure; Lisa Nicole Jennings; David Meriwether; David Harris; Paul Arndt

The USDA Forest Service has many national level policies related to multiple use management. However, translating national policy to stand level forest management can be difficult. As an example of how a national policy can be put into action, we examined three case studies in which a desired future condition is evaluated at the national, region, and local scale. We chose to use carbon sequestration as the desired future condition because climate change has become a major area of concern during the last decade. Several studies have determined that the 193 million acres of US national forest land currently sequester 11 to 15% of the total carbon emitted as a nation. This paper provides a framework by which national scale strategies for maintaining or enhancing forest carbon sequestration is translated through regional considerations and local constraints in adaptive management practices. Although this framework used the carbon sequestration as a case study, this framework could be used with other national level priorities such as the National Environmental Protection Act (NEPA) or the Endangered Species Act (ESA).


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Upscaling key ecosystem functions across the conterminous United States by a water‐centric ecosystem model

Ge Sun; Peter Caldwell; Asko Noormets; Steven G. McNulty; Erika Cohen; Jennifer Moore Myers; Jean-Christophe Domec; Emrys Treasure; Qiaozhen Mu; Jingfeng Xiao; Ranjeet John; Jiquan Chen


Forest Science | 2012

A comparison of three methods to estimate evapotranspiration in two contrasting loblolly pine plantations: age-related changes in water use and drought sensitivity of evapotranspiration components

Jean-Christophe Domec; Ge Sun; Asko Noormets; Michael J. Gavazzi; Emrys Treasure; Erika Cohen; Jennifer J. Swenson; Steve McNulty; John S. King


Hydrological Processes | 2015

Clearcutting upland forest alters transpiration of residual trees in the riparian buffer zone

Johnny Boggs; Ge Sun; Jean-Christophe Domec; Steven G. McNulty; Emrys Treasure


Gen. Tech. Rep. SRS-GTR-193. Asheville, NC: USDA-Forest Service, Southern Research Station. 47 p. | 2014

Climate change effects in El Yunque National Forest, Puerto Rico, and the Caribbean region

Lisa Nicole Jennings; Jamison Douglas; Emrys Treasure; Grizelle González


Transactions of the ASABE | 2016

Canopy rainfall interception measured over ten years in a coastal plain loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) plantation

Michael J. Gavazzi; Ge Sun; Steve McNulty; Emrys Treasure; M.G Wightman


Information Pamphlet: North Carolina Forest Service, Raleigh, NC. 4p. | 2012

North Carolina's Emerging Forest Threats: Management Options for Healthy Forests

Lisa Nicole Jennings; Emrys Treasure; Jennifer Moore Myers; Steve McNulty; Sean Brogan; David Jones

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Jean-Christophe Domec

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Ge Sun

United States Forest Service

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John S. King

North Carolina State University

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Michael J. Gavazzi

United States Forest Service

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Steven G. McNulty

United States Forest Service

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Johnny Boggs

United States Forest Service

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Lisa Nicole Jennings

United States Forest Service

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Steve McNulty

United States Forest Service

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Jennifer Moore Myers

United States Department of Agriculture

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