Jean-Marc Ourcival
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jean-Marc Ourcival.
Nature | 2005
Ph. Ciais; Markus Reichstein; Nicolas Viovy; A. Granier; Jérôme Ogée; Vincent Allard; Marc Aubinet; Nina Buchmann; Chr. Bernhofer; Arnaud Carrara; F. Chevallier; N. de Noblet; Andrew D. Friend; Pierre Friedlingstein; Thomas Grünwald; Bernard Heinesch; P. Keronen; Alexander Knohl; Gerhard Krinner; Denis Loustau; Giovanni Manca; Giorgio Matteucci; F. Miglietta; Jean-Marc Ourcival; D. Papale; Kim Pilegaard; Serge Rambal; Günther Seufert; Jean-François Soussana; M. J. Sanz
Future climate warming is expected to enhance plant growth in temperate ecosystems and to increase carbon sequestration. But although severe regional heatwaves may become more frequent in a changing climate, their impact on terrestrial carbon cycling is unclear. Here we report measurements of ecosystem carbon dioxide fluxes, remotely sensed radiation absorbed by plants, and country-level crop yields taken during the European heatwave in 2003. We use a terrestrial biosphere simulation model to assess continental-scale changes in primary productivity during 2003, and their consequences for the net carbon balance. We estimate a 30 per cent reduction in gross primary productivity over Europe, which resulted in a strong anomalous net source of carbon dioxide (0.5 Pg C yr-1) to the atmosphere and reversed the effect of four years of net ecosystem carbon sequestration. Our results suggest that productivity reduction in eastern and western Europe can be explained by rainfall deficit and extreme summer heat, respectively. We also find that ecosystem respiration decreased together with gross primary productivity, rather than accelerating with the temperature rise. Model results, corroborated by historical records of crop yields, suggest that such a reduction in Europes primary productivity is unprecedented during the last century. An increase in future drought events could turn temperate ecosystems into carbon sources, contributing to positive carbon-climate feedbacks already anticipated in the tropics and at high latitudes.
Ecology | 2010
I. M. Pérez-Ramos; Jean-Marc Ourcival; Jean-Marc Limousin; Serge Rambal
Mast seeding, the synchronous, highly variable seed production among years, is very common in tree species, but there is no consensus about its main causes and the main environmental factors affecting it. In this study, we first analyze a long-term data set on reproductive and vegetative growth of Quercus ilex in a mediterranean woodland in order to identify the main environmental drivers of interannual variation in flower and seed production and contrast the impact of climate vs. adaptive factors as main causes of masting. Second, we conducted an experiment of rainfall exclusion to evaluate the effects of an increasing drought (simulating predictions of global change models) on both reproductive processes. The annual seed crop was always affected by environmental factors related to the precipitation pattern, these abiotic factors disrupting the fruiting process at different periods of time. Seed production was strongly dependent upon water availability for the plant at initial (spring) and advanced (summer) stages of the acorn maturation cycle, whereas the final step of seed development was negatively affected by the frequency of torrential-rain events. We also found clear evidence that seed masting in the study species is not only regulated by selective endogenous rhythms, but is mainly a physiological response to the variable environment. Our results from the rainfall exclusion experiment corroborated the conclusions obtained from the 26-year fruiting record and demonstrated that the high interannual variation in seed crop was mainly determined by the success in seed development rather than by the flowering effort. Under a global change scenario, it could be expected that the drier conditions predicted by climate models reinforce the negative effects of summer drought on seed production, leading to negative consequences for tree recruitment and forest dynamics.
Ecology | 2010
Ignacio Manuel Pérez-Ramos; Jean-Marc Ourcival; Jean-Marc Limousin; Serge Rambal
Mast seeding, the synchronous, highly variable seed production among years, is very common in tree species, but there is no consensus about its main causes and the main environmental factors affecting it. In this study, we first analyze a long-term data set on reproductive and vegetative growth of Quercus ilex in a mediterranean woodland in order to identify the main environmental drivers of interannual variation in flower and seed production and contrast the impact of climate vs. adaptive factors as main causes of masting. Second, we conducted an experiment of rainfall exclusion to evaluate the effects of an increasing drought (simulating predictions of global change models) on both reproductive processes. The annual seed crop was always affected by environmental factors related to the precipitation pattern, these abiotic factors disrupting the fruiting process at different periods of time. Seed production was strongly dependent upon water availability for the plant at initial (spring) and advanced (summer) stages of the acorn maturation cycle, whereas the final step of seed development was negatively affected by the frequency of torrential-rain events. We also found clear evidence that seed masting in the study species is not only regulated by selective endogenous rhythms, but is mainly a physiological response to the variable environment. Our results from the rainfall exclusion experiment corroborated the conclusions obtained from the 26-year fruiting record and demonstrated that the high interannual variation in seed crop was mainly determined by the success in seed development rather than by the flowering effort. Under a global change scenario, it could be expected that the drier conditions predicted by climate models reinforce the negative effects of summer drought on seed production, leading to negative consequences for tree recruitment and forest dynamics.
Ecological Applications | 2010
Dennis D. Baldocchi; Siyan Ma; Serge Rambal; Laurent Misson; Jean-Marc Ourcival; Jean-Marc Limousin; J. S. Pereira; Dario Papale
We assessed the differential advantages of deciduousness and evergreenness by examining 26 site-years of carbon dioxide, water vapor, and energy flux measurements from five comparable oak woodlands in France, Italy, Portugal, and California (USA). On average, the evergreen and deciduous oak woodlands assimilated and respired similar amounts of carbon while using similar amounts of water. These results suggest that evergreen and deciduous woodlands have specific, and similar, ecological costs in mediterranean climates, and that both leaf habits are able to meet these costs. What are the mechanisms behind these findings? Deciduous oaks compensated for having a shorter growing season by attaining a greater capacity to assimilate carbon for a given amount of intercepted solar radiation during the well-watered spring period; at saturating light levels, deciduous oaks gained carbon at six times the rate of evergreen oaks. Otherwise, the two leaf habits experienced similar efficiencies in carbon use (the change in carbon respired per change in carbon assimilated), water use (the change in carbon assimilation per change in water evaporated), and rainfall use (the change in evaporation per change in rainfall). Overall, leaf area index, rather than leaf habit, was the significant factor in determining the absolute magnitude of carbon gained and water lost by each evergreen and deciduous oak woodland over an annual interval; the closed canopies assimilated and respired more carbon and transpired more water than the open canopies. Both deciduous and evergreen mediterranean oaks survive in their seasonally hot/dry, wet/ cool native range by ensuring that actual evaporation is less than the supply of water. This feat is accomplished by adjusting the leaf area index to reduce total water loss at the landscape scale, by down-regulating photosynthesis, respiration, and stomatal conductance with progressive seasonal soil water deficits, and by extending their root systems to tap groundwater.
Sensors | 2011
Manuela Balzarolo; Karen Anderson; Caroline J. Nichol; Micol Rossini; L. Vescovo; Nicola Arriga; Georg Wohlfahrt; Jean-Christophe Calvet; Arnaud Carrara; Sofia Cerasoli; Sergio Cogliati; Fabrice Daumard; Lars Eklundh; J.A. Elbers; Fatih Evrendilek; R.N. Handcock; Jörg Kaduk; Katja Klumpp; Bernard Longdoz; Giorgio Matteucci; Michele Meroni; Leonardo Montagnani; Jean-Marc Ourcival; Enrique P. Sánchez-Cañete; Jean-Yves Pontailler; Radosław Juszczak; Bob Scholes; M. Pilar Martín
This paper reviews the currently available optical sensors, their limitations and opportunities for deployment at Eddy Covariance (EC) sites in Europe. This review is based on the results obtained from an online survey designed and disseminated by the Co-cooperation in Science and Technology (COST) Action ESO903—“Spectral Sampling Tools for Vegetation Biophysical Parameters and Flux Measurements in Europe” that provided a complete view on spectral sampling activities carried out within the different research teams in European countries. The results have highlighted that a wide variety of optical sensors are in use at flux sites across Europe, and responses further demonstrated that users were not always fully aware of the key issues underpinning repeatability and the reproducibility of their spectral measurements. The key findings of this survey point towards the need for greater awareness of the need for standardisation and development of a common protocol of optical sampling at the European EC sites.
New Phytologist | 2015
Morine Lempereur; Nicolas K. Martin-StPaul; Claire Damesin; Richard Joffre; Jean-Marc Ourcival; Alain Rocheteau; Serge Rambal
Understanding whether tree growth is limited by carbon gain (source limitation) or by the direct effect of environmental factors such as water deficit or temperature (sink limitation) is crucial for improving projections of the effects of climate change on forest productivity. We studied the relationships between tree basal area (BA) variations, eddy covariance carbon fluxes, predawn water potential (Ψpd ) and temperature at different timescales using an 8-yr dataset and a rainfall exclusion experiment in a Quercus ilex Mediterranean coppice. At the daily timescale, during periods of low temperature (< 5°C) and high water deficit (< -1.1 MPa), gross primary productivity and net ecosystem productivity remained positive whereas the stem increment was nil. Thus, stem increment appeared limited by drought and temperature rather than by carbon input. Annual growth was accurately predicted by the duration of BA increment during spring (Δtt0-t1 ). The onset of growth (t0 ) was related to winter temperatures and the summer interruption of growth (t1 ) to a threshold Ψpd value of -1.1 MPa. We suggest that using environmental drivers (i.e. drought and temperature) to predict stem growth phenology can contribute to an improvement in vegetation models and may change the current projections of Mediterranean forest productivity under climate change scenarios.
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2001
J.P. Lhomme; Alain Rocheteau; Jean-Marc Ourcival; Serge Rambal
A model simulating the diurnal pattern of water transfer within a Holm oak (Quercus ilex) canopy in Mediterranean conditions has been designed. It combines a non-steady-state hydraulic model with a transpiration model. The hydraulic model includes a reservoir represented by a capacitance, a soil‐plant hydraulic resistance and a storage hydraulic resistance connected to the capacitance. It simulates the diurnal variation of water uptake and storage flow from the diurnal course of transpiration used as input. The transpiration model is based upon the Penman‐Monteith equation and a Jarvis-type representation of the stomatal resistance (i.e., a minimum stomatal resistance multiplied by the product of independent stress functions). Simultaneous measurements of canopy evaporation by an eddy covariance system and water uptake from the soil by sap flow measurements have allowed one to calibrate and validate the model. The capacitance has been found to be equal to 0.17 mm MPa 1 (with a storage hydraulic resistance of about 2 MPa h mm 1 ), generating a time lag of about 1 h between the transpiration rate and the water uptake from the soil. The hydraulic model correctly represents the experimental data. The transpiration model provides reasonable estimates, but with a significant scatter. The combined model simulates the diurnal variation of water uptake, storage flow and transpiration rate directly from environmental variables, but in this latter case, the storage flow is estimated with a rather poor accuracy.
European Journal of Soil Biology | 2002
Jérôme Cortet; Dominique Gillon; Richard Joffre; Jean-Marc Ourcival; Nicole Poinsot-Balaguer
The effects of two herbicides (atrazine and alachlore) and two insecticides (fipronil and carbofuran) on organic matter decomposition and soil mesofauna were evaluated in a maize field under normal agriculture conditions. Soil mesofauna were studied using the litterbag method. Near infrared reflectance spectrophotometry was used to study the effects on decomposition parameters (litter mass and nitrogen dynamic). The effects on soil microarthropods varied depending on both taxon and pesticide, with fipronil having a particularly strong effect. Differences were also observed between treatments for organic matter decomposition parameters, especially with the use of alachlore. Therefore, the analysis of microarthropods and the decomposition parameters provides complementary information on the effects of these chemical treatments.
Annals of Botany | 2013
Thierry Joët; Jean-Marc Ourcival; Stéphane Dussert
BACKGROUND AND AIMS Several widespread tree species of temperate forests, such as species of the genus Quercus, produce recalcitrant (desiccation-sensitive) seeds. However, the ecological significance of seed desiccation sensitivity in temperate regions is largely unknown. Do seeds of such species suffer from drying during the period when they remain on the soil, between shedding in autumn and the return of conditions required for germination in spring? METHODS To test this hypothesis, the Mediterranean holm oak (Quercus ilex) forest was used as a model system. The relationships between the climate in winter, the characteristics of microhabitats, acorn morphological traits, and the water status and viability of seeds after winter were then investigated in 42 woodlands sampled over the entire French distribution of the species. KEY RESULTS The percentages of germination and normal seedling development were tightly linked to the water content of seeds after the winter period, revealing that in situ desiccation is a major cause of mortality. The homogeneity of seed response to drying suggests that neither intraspecific genetic variation nor environmental conditions had a significant impact on the level of desiccation sensitivity of seeds. In contrast, the water and viability status of seeds at the time of collection were dramatically influenced by cumulative rainfall and maximum temperatures during winter. A significant effect of shade and of the type of soil cover was also evidenced. CONCLUSIONS The findings establish that seed desiccation sensitivity is a key functional trait which may influence the success of recruitment in temperate recalcitrant seed species. Considering that most models of climate change predict changes in rainfall and temperature in the Mediterranean basin, the present work could help foresee changes in the distribution of Q. ilex and other oak species, and hence plant community alterations.
Journal of Arid Environments | 1994
Jean-Marc Ourcival; C. Floret; E. Le Floc'h; Roger Pontanier
In Tunisia, the rehabilitation of overgrazed and degraded rangelands is being attempted through the reintroduction of various native perennial plant species. We studied plant—water relations in two of the leading candidate species, Seriphidium incultum (syn: Artemisia herba-alba) and Anthyllis henoniana, under conditions of water stress. Anthyllis was found to be adapted to water stress through rapid water uptake ability and a deep root system allowing access to water reserves lying deep in the soil. In contrast, Seriphidium has adapted to drought by tolerating very severe desiccation of its above-ground parts. Moreover, Seriphidium individuals consist of several hydrologically independent subunits, with the result that one part of the plant can die without damaging the rest of the plant. Relationships between xylem potential in the two species and soil water potential are also discussed.