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Featured researches published by Rosvel Bracho.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Ecosystem carbon dioxide fluxes after disturbance in forests of North America

B. D. Amiro; Alan G. Barr; Jordan G. Barr; T.A. Black; Rosvel Bracho; Mathew Brown; Jiquan Chen; Kenneth L. Clark; Kenneth J. Davis; Ankur R. Desai; Sylvain Doré; Vic Engel; Jose D. Fuentes; Allen H. Goldstein; Michael L. Goulden; Thomas E. Kolb; Michael Lavigne; Beverly E. Law; Hank A. Margolis; Timothy A. Martin; J. H. McCaughey; Laurent Misson; M. Montes‐Helu; Asko Noormets; James T. Randerson; Gregory Starr; Jingfeng Xiao

Disturbances are important for renewal of North American forests. Here we summarize more than 180 site years of eddy covariance measurements of carbon dioxide flux made at forest chronosequences in North America. The disturbances included stand-replacing fire (Alaska, Arizona, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan) and harvest (British Columbia, Florida, New Brunswick, Oregon, Quebec, Saskatchewan, and Wisconsin) events, insect infestations (gypsy moth, forest tent caterpillar, and mountain pine beetle), Hurricane Wilma, and silvicultural thinning (Arizona, California, and New Brunswick). Net ecosystem production (NEP) showed a carbon loss from all ecosystems following a stand-replacing disturbance, becoming a carbon sink by 20 years for all ecosystems and by 10 years for most. Maximum carbon losses following disturbance (g C m−2y−1) ranged from 1270 in Florida to 200 in boreal ecosystems. Similarly, for forests less than 100 years old, maximum uptake (g C m−2y−1) was 1180 in Florida mangroves and 210 in boreal ecosystems. More temperate forests had intermediate fluxes. Boreal ecosystems were relatively time invariant after 20 years, whereas western ecosystems tended to increase in carbon gain over time. This was driven mostly by gross photosynthetic production (GPP) because total ecosystem respiration (ER) and heterotrophic respiration were relatively invariant with age. GPP/ER was as low as 0.2 immediately following stand-replacing disturbance reaching a constant value of 1.2 after 20 years. NEP following insect defoliations and silvicultural thinning showed lesser changes than stand-replacing events, with decreases in the year of disturbance followed by rapid recovery. NEP decreased in a mangrove ecosystem following Hurricane Wilma because of a decrease in GPP and an increase in ER.


Nature | 2011

Observed increase in local cooling effect of deforestation at higher latitudes

Xuhui Lee; Michael L. Goulden; David Y. Hollinger; Alan G. Barr; T. Andrew Black; Gil Bohrer; Rosvel Bracho; Bert G. Drake; Allen H. Goldstein; Lianhong Gu; Gabriel G. Katul; Thomas E. Kolb; Beverly E. Law; Hank A. Margolis; Tilden P. Meyers; Russell K. Monson; William Munger; Ram Oren; Kyaw Tha Paw U; Andrew D. Richardson; Hans Peter Schmid; Ralf M. Staebler; Steven C. Wofsy; Lei Zhao

Deforestation in mid- to high latitudes is hypothesized to have the potential to cool the Earth’s surface by altering biophysical processes. In climate models of continental-scale land clearing, the cooling is triggered by increases in surface albedo and is reinforced by a land albedo–sea ice feedback. This feedback is crucial in the model predictions; without it other biophysical processes may overwhelm the albedo effect to generate warming instead. Ongoing land-use activities, such as land management for climate mitigation, are occurring at local scales (hectares) presumably too small to generate the feedback, and it is not known whether the intrinsic biophysical mechanism on its own can change the surface temperature in a consistent manner. Nor has the effect of deforestation on climate been demonstrated over large areas from direct observations. Here we show that surface air temperature is lower in open land than in nearby forested land. The effect is 0.85 ± 0.44 K (mean ± one standard deviation) northwards of 45° N and 0.21 ± 0.53 K southwards. Below 35° N there is weak evidence that deforestation leads to warming. Results are based on comparisons of temperature at forested eddy covariance towers in the USA and Canada and, as a proxy for small areas of cleared land, nearby surface weather stations. Night-time temperature changes unrelated to changes in surface albedo are an important contributor to the overall cooling effect. The observed latitudinal dependence is consistent with theoretical expectation of changes in energy loss from convection and radiation across latitudes in both the daytime and night-time phase of the diurnal cycle, the latter of which remains uncertain in climate models.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2011

Mercury Distribution Across 14 U.S. Forests. Part I: Spatial Patterns of Concentrations in Biomass, Litter, and Soils

Daniel Obrist; Dale W. Johnson; S. E. Lindberg; Yiqi Luo; Oleksandra Hararuk; Rosvel Bracho; J. J. Battles; D. B. Dail; Robert L. Edmonds; Russell K. Monson; Scott V. Ollinger; Stephen G. Pallardy; K. S. Pregitzer; D. E. Todd

Results from a systematic investigation of mercury (Hg) concentrations across 14 forest sites in the United States show highest concentrations in litter layers, strongly enriched in Hg compared to aboveground tissues and indicative of substantial postdepositional sorption of Hg. Soil Hg concentrations were lower than in litter, with highest concentrations in surface soils. Aboveground tissues showed no detectable spatial patterns, likely due to 17 different tree species present across sites. Litter and soil Hg concentrations positively correlated with carbon (C), latitude, precipitation, and clay (in soil), which together explained up to 94% of concentration variability. We observed strong latitudinal increases in Hg in soils and litter, in contrast to inverse latitudinal gradients of atmospheric deposition measures. Soil and litter Hg concentrations were closely linked to C contents, consistent with well-known associations between organic matter and Hg, and we propose that C also shapes distribution of Hg in forests at continental scales. The consistent link between C and Hg distribution may reflect a long-term legacy whereby old, C-rich soil and litter layers sequester atmospheric Hg depositions over long time periods. Based on a multiregression model, we present a distribution map of Hg concentrations in surface soils of the United States.


Ecological Monographs | 2012

Controls on carbon dynamics by ecosystem structure and climate for southeastern U.S. slash pine plantations

Rosvel Bracho; Gregory Starr; Henry L. Gholz; Timothy A. Martin; Wendell P. Cropper; Henry W. Loescher

Planted pine forests (plantations) in the southeastern United States are an important component of the continents carbon balance. Forest carbon dynamics are affected by a range of factors including climatic variability. Multiyear droughts have affected the region in the past, and an increase in the frequency of drought events has been predicted. How this increased climatic variability will affect the capacity of the regions pine plantations to sequester carbon is not known. We used eddy covariance and biometric approaches to measure carbon dynamics over nine years in two slash pine plantations (Pinus elliottii var elliottii Englm) in north Florida, consisting of a newly planted and a mid-rotation stand. During this time, the region experienced two multiyear droughts (1999-2002 and 2006-2008), separated by a three-year wet period. Net ecosystem carbon accumulation measured using both approaches showed the same trends and magnitudes during plantation development. The newly planted site released 15.6 Mg C/ha during the first three years after planting, before becoming a carbon sink in year 4. Increases in carbon uptake during the early stages of stand development were driven by the aggrading leaf area index (LAI). After canopy closure, both sites were continuous carbon sinks with net carbon uptake (NEE) fluctuating between 4 and ; 8M g Cha � 1 � yr � 1 , depending on environmental conditions. Drought reduced NEE by ;25% through its negative effects on both LAI and radiation-use efficiency, which resulted in a larger impact on gross ecosystem carbon exchange than on ecosystem respiration. While results indicate that responses to drought involved complex interactions among water availability, LAI, and radiation-use efficiency, these ecosystems remain carbon sinks under current management strategies and climatic variability. Variation within locations is primarily due to major disturbances, such as logging in the current study and, to a much lesser extent, local environmental fluctuations. When data from this study are compared to flux data from a broad range of forests worldwide, these ecosystems fill a data gap in the warm-temperate zone and support a broad maximum NEE (for closed-canopy forests) between 88C and 208C mean annual temperature.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Increased wintertime CO2 loss as a result of sustained tundra warming

Elizabeth E. Webb; Edward A. G. Schuur; Susan M. Natali; Kiva L. Oken; Rosvel Bracho; John Krapek; David Risk; Nick Nickerson

Permafrost soils currently store approximately 1672 Pg of carbon (C), but as high latitudes warm, this temperature-protected C reservoir will become vulnerable to higher rates of decomposition. In recent decades, air temperatures in the high latitudes have warmed more than any other region globally, particularly during the winter. Over the coming century, the arctic winter is also expected to experience the most warming of any region or season, yet it is notably understudied. Here we present nonsummer season (NSS) CO2 flux data from the Carbon in Permafrost Experimental Heating Research project, an ecosystem warming experiment of moist acidic tussock tundra in interior Alaska. Our goals were to quantify the relationship between environmental variables and winter CO2 production, account for subnivean photosynthesis and late fall plant C uptake in our estimate of NSS CO2 exchange, constrain NSS CO2 loss estimates using multiple methods of measuring winter CO2 flux, and quantify the effect of winter soil warming on total NSS CO2 balance. We measured CO2 flux using four methods: two chamber techniques (the snow pit method and one where a chamber is left under the snow for the entire season), eddy covariance, and soda lime adsorption, and found that NSS CO2 loss varied up to fourfold, depending on the method used. CO2 production was dependent on soil temperature and day of season but atmospheric pressure and air temperature were also important in explaining CO2 diffusion out of the soil. Warming stimulated both ecosystem respiration and productivity during the NSS and increased overall CO2 loss during this period by 14% (this effect varied by year, ranging from 7 to 24%). When combined with the summertime CO2 fluxes from the same site, our results suggest that this subarctic tundra ecosystem is shifting away from its historical function as a C sink to a C source.


Environmental Research Letters | 2014

Data-based perfect-deficit approach to understanding climate extremes and forest carbon assimilation capacity

Suhua Wei; Chuixiang Yi; George R. Hendrey; Timothy T. Eaton; Gerald Rustic; Shaoqiang Wang; Heping Liu; Nir Y. Krakauer; Weiguo Wang; Ankur R. Desai; Leonardo Montagnani; Kyaw Tha Paw U; Matthias Falk; Andrew Black; Christian Bernhofer; Thomas Grünwald; Tuomas Laurila; Alessandro Cescatti; E.J. Moors; Rosvel Bracho; Riccardo Valentini

Several lines of evidence suggest that the warming climate plays a vital role in driving certain types of extreme weather. The impact of warming and of extreme weather on forest carbon assimilation capacity is poorly known. Filling this knowledge gap is critical towards understanding the amount of carbon that forests can hold. Here, we used a perfect-deficit approach to identify forest canopy photosynthetic capacity (CPC) deficits and analyze how they correlate to climate extremes, based on observational data measured by the eddy covariance method at 27 forest sites over 146 site-years. We found that droughts severely affect the carbon assimilation capacities of evergreen broadleaf forest (EBF) and deciduous broadleaf forest. The carbon assimilation capacities of Mediterranean forests were highly sensitive to climate extremes, while marine forest climates tended to be insensitive to climate extremes. Our estimates suggest an average global reduction of forest CPC due to unfavorable climate extremes of 6.3 Pg C (~5.2% of global gross primary production) per growing season over 2001–2010, with EBFs contributing 52% of the total reduction.


Global Change Biology | 2017

Nonlinear CO2 flux response to 7 years of experimentally induced permafrost thaw

Marguerite Mauritz; Rosvel Bracho; Gerardo Celis; Jack A. Hutchings; Susan M. Natali; Elaine Pegoraro; Verity G. Salmon; Christina Schädel; Elizabeth E. Webb; Edward A. G. Schuur

Abstract Rapid Arctic warming is expected to increase global greenhouse gas concentrations as permafrost thaw exposes immense stores of frozen carbon (C) to microbial decomposition. Permafrost thaw also stimulates plant growth, which could offset C loss. Using data from 7 years of experimental Air and Soil warming in moist acidic tundra, we show that Soil warming had a much stronger effect on CO2 flux than Air warming. Soil warming caused rapid permafrost thaw and increased ecosystem respiration (Reco), gross primary productivity (GPP), and net summer CO2 storage (NEE). Over 7 years Reco, GPP, and NEE also increased in Control (i.e., ambient plots), but this change could be explained by slow thaw in Control areas. In the initial stages of thaw, Reco, GPP, and NEE increased linearly with thaw across all treatments, despite different rates of thaw. As thaw in Soil warming continued to increase linearly, ground surface subsidence created saturated microsites and suppressed Reco, GPP, and NEE. However Reco and GPP remained high in areas with large Eriophorum vaginatum biomass. In general NEE increased with thaw, but was more strongly correlated with plant biomass than thaw, indicating that higher Reco in deeply thawed areas during summer months was balanced by GPP. Summer CO2 flux across treatments fit a single quadratic relationship that captured the functional response of CO2 flux to thaw, water table depth, and plant biomass. These results demonstrate the importance of indirect thaw effects on CO2 flux: plant growth and water table dynamics. Nonsummer Reco models estimated that the area was an annual CO2 source during all years of observation. Nonsummer CO2 loss in warmer, more deeply thawed soils exceeded the increases in summer GPP, and thawed tundra was a net annual CO2 source.


Tellus B | 2016

Direct and indirect effects of climatic variations on the interannual variability in net ecosystem exchange across terrestrial ecosystems

Junjiong Shao; Xuhui Zhou; Yiqi Luo; Bo Li; Mika Aurela; David P. Billesbach; Peter D. Blanken; Rosvel Bracho; Jiquan Chen; Marc L. Fischer; Yuling Fu; Lianhong Gu; Shijie Han; Yongtao He; Thomas E. Kolb; Yingnian Li; Zoltán Nagy; Shuli Niu; Walter C. Oechel; Krisztina Pintér; Peili Shi; Andrew E. Suyker; Margaret S. Torn; Andrej Varlagin; Huimin Wang; Junhua Yan; Guirui Yu; Junhui Zhang

Climatic variables not only directly affect the interannual variability (IAV) in net ecosystem exchange of CO2 (NEE) but also indirectly drive it by changing the physiological parameters. Identifying these direct and indirect paths can reveal the underlying mechanisms of carbon (C) dynamics. In this study, we applied a path analysis using flux data from 65 sites to quantify the direct and indirect climatic effects on IAV in NEE and to evaluate the potential relationships among the climatic variables and physiological parameters that represent physiology and phenology of ecosystems. We found that the maximum photosynthetic rate was the most important factor for the IAV in gross primary productivity (GPP), which was mainly induced by the variation in vapour pressure deficit. For ecosystem respiration (RE), the most important drivers were GPP and the reference respiratory rate. The biome type regulated the direct and indirect paths, with distinctive differences between forests and non-forests, evergreen needleleaf forests and deciduous broadleaf forests, and between grasslands and croplands. Different paths were also found among wet, moist and dry ecosystems. However, the climatic variables can only partly explain the IAV in physiological parameters, suggesting that the latter may also result from other biotic and disturbance factors. In addition, the climatic variables related to NEE were not necessarily the same as those related to GPP and RE, indicating the emerging difficulty encountered when studying the IAV in NEE. Overall, our results highlight the contribution of certain physiological parameters to the IAV in C fluxes and the importance of biome type and multi-year water conditions, which should receive more attention in future experimental and modelling research.


Ecosystems | 2017

The Cooling Trend of Canopy Temperature During the Maturation, Succession, and Recovery of Ecosystems

Hua Lin; Ze-Xin Fan; Leilei Shi; Altaf Arain; Harry McCaughey; Dave Billesbach; M. B. Siqueira; Rosvel Bracho; Walter C. Oechel

The maximum exergy dissipation theory provides a theoretical basis for using surface temperature to measure the status and development of ecosystems, which could provide an early warning of rapid evaluation of ecosystem degradation. In the present study, we used the radiation balance of ecosystems to demonstrate this hypothesis theoretically. Further, we used empirical data to verify whether ecosystems gain more radiation, while lowering their surface temperatures, as they develop naturally. We analyzed 12 chronosequences from the FLUXNET database using meteorological data and heat fluxes. We included age, disturbance, and successional chronosequences across six climate zones. Net radiation (Rn) and the ratio of net radiation to global radiation (Rn/Rg) were used to measure the energy gain of the ecosystems. The maximum daily air temperature above the canopy (Tmax) and thermal response number (TRN) were used to analyze the surface temperature trends with ecosystem natural development. The general trends of Tmax, TRN, Rn, and Rn/Rg demonstrated that ecosystems become cooler and more stable, yet gain more energy, throughout their natural development. Among the four indicators, TRN showed the most consistent trends and highest sensitivity to ecosystem growth, succession, and recovery. Moreover, TRN was not significantly influenced by precipitation or wind. We propose that TRN can be used to rapidly evaluate or warn of ecosystem disturbance, senescence, and degradation without prior knowledge of species composition, nutrient status, and complex ecosystem processes.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Adding Depth to Our Understanding of Nitrogen Dynamics in Permafrost Soils

Verity G. Salmon; Christina Schädel; Rosvel Bracho; Elaine Pegoraro; Gerardo Celis; Marguerite Mauritz; Michelle C. Mack; Edward A. G. Schuur

Losses of C from decomposing permafrost may be offset by increased productivity of tundra plants, but nitrogen availability partially limits plant growth in tundra ecosystems. In this soil incubation experiment carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling dynamics were examined from the soil surface down through upper permafrost. We found that losses of CO2 were negatively correlated to net N mineralization because C-rich surface soils mineralized little N, while deep soils had low rates of C respiration but high rates of net N mineralization. Permafrost soils released a large flush of inorganic N when initially thawed. Depth-specific rates of N mineralization from the incubation were combined with thaw depths and soil temperatures from a nearby manipulative warming experiment to simulate the potential magnitude, timing, and depth of inorganic N release during the process of permafrost thaw. Our calculations show that inorganic N released from newly thawed permafrost may be similar in magnitude to the increase in Nmineralized by warmed soils in the middle of the profile. The total release of inorganic N from the soil profile during the simulated thaw process was twice the size of the observed increase in the foliar N pool observed at the manipulative experiment. Our findings suggest that increases in N availability are likely to outpace the N demand of tundra plants during the first 5 years of permafrost thaw and may increase C losses from surface soils as well as induce denitrification and leaching of N from these ecosystems. Plain Language Summary Arctic plants are rooted in an active layer of soil that thaws during the summer months and is often nutrient-poor because of slow decomposition in these cold ecosystems. Beneath the active layer, there is a layer of soil that remains frozen year-round (permafrost). In this experiment, we collected soil cores that spanned the entire active layer and upper permafrost and incubated these soils in the lab so we could monitor their decomposition. We focus on nitrogen cycling because this is a key nutrient for the growth of arctic plants and soil microbes. We found nitrogen availability was low in shallow surface soils but high deep in the active layer and permafrost. Our results show that arctic warming will impact nitrogen release from two locations in the soil profile: at the bottom of the soil profile when nitrogen-rich permafrost soil thaws for the first time and with the active layer when decomposition is accelerated by warmer temperatures. Our calculations suggest that these two sources of nitrogen are similar in size during the first five years of permafrost thaw, exceed plant demand for nitrogen, and are likely to contribute to losses of nitrogen from warming arctic ecosystems.

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Susan M. Natali

Woods Hole Research Center

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Jiquan Chen

Michigan State University

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Ankur R. Desai

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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