Sophia Etzold
ETH Zurich
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sophia Etzold.
New Phytologist | 2010
R. Zweifel; Werner Eugster; Sophia Etzold; Matthias Dobbertin; Nina Buchmann; Rudolf Häsler
*Continuous stem radius changes (DR) include growth and water-related processes on the individual tree level. DR is assumed to provide carbon turnover information complementary to net ecosystem productivity (NEP) which integrates fluxes over the entire forest ecosystem. Here, we investigated the unexpectedly close relationship between NEP and DR and asked for causalities. *NEP (positive values indicate carbon sink) measured by eddy covariance over 11 yr was analysed at three time scales alongside automated point dendrometer DR data from a Swiss subalpine Norway spruce forest. *On annual and monthly scales, the remarkably close relationship between NEP and DR was positive, whereas on a half-hourly scale the relationship was negative. Gross primary production (GPP) had a similar explanatory power at shorter time scales, but was significantly less correlated with DR on an annual scale. *The causal explanation for the NEP-DR relationship is still fragmentary; however, it is partially attributable to the following: radial stem growth with a strong effect on monthly and annual increases in NEP and DR; frost-induced bark tissue dehydration with a parallel decrease in both measures on a monthly scale; and transpiration-induced DR shrinkage which is negatively correlated with assimilation and thus with NEP on a half-hourly scale.
New Phytologist | 2012
Shuli Niu; Yiqi Luo; Shenfeng Fei; Wenping Yuan; David S. Schimel; Beverly E. Law; C. Ammann; M. Altaf Arain; Almut Arneth; Marc Aubinet; Alan G. Barr; Jason Beringer; Christian Bernhofer; T. Andrew Black; Nina Buchmann; Alessandro Cescatti; Jiquan Chen; Kenneth J. Davis; Ebba Dellwik; Ankur R. Desai; Sophia Etzold; Louis François; Damiano Gianelle; Bert Gielen; Allen H. Goldstein; Margriet Groenendijk; Lianhong Gu; Niall P. Hanan; Carole Helfter; Takashi Hirano
• It is well established that individual organisms can acclimate and adapt to temperature to optimize their functioning. However, thermal optimization of ecosystems, as an assemblage of organisms, has not been examined at broad spatial and temporal scales. • Here, we compiled data from 169 globally distributed sites of eddy covariance and quantified the temperature response functions of net ecosystem exchange (NEE), an ecosystem-level property, to determine whether NEE shows thermal optimality and to explore the underlying mechanisms. • We found that the temperature response of NEE followed a peak curve, with the optimum temperature (corresponding to the maximum magnitude of NEE) being positively correlated with annual mean temperature over years and across sites. Shifts of the optimum temperature of NEE were mostly a result of temperature acclimation of gross primary productivity (upward shift of optimum temperature) rather than changes in the temperature sensitivity of ecosystem respiration. • Ecosystem-level thermal optimality is a newly revealed ecosystem property, presumably reflecting associated evolutionary adaptation of organisms within ecosystems, and has the potential to significantly regulate ecosystem-climate change feedbacks. The thermal optimality of NEE has implications for understanding fundamental properties of ecosystems in changing environments and benchmarking global models.
New Phytologist | 2013
Sophia Etzold; Roman Zweifel; Nadine K. Ruehr; Werner Eugster; Nina Buchmann
Stem CO(2) concentrations (stem [CO(2)]) undergo large temporal variations that need to be understood to better link tree physiological processes to biosphere-atmosphere CO(2) exchange. During 19 months, stem [CO(2)] was continuously measured in mature subalpine Norway spruce trees (Picea abies) and jointly analysed with stem, soil and air temperatures, sap flow rates, stem radius changes and CO(2) efflux rates from stem and soil on different time scales. Stem [CO(2)] exhibited a strong seasonality, of which over 80% could be explained with stem and soil temperatures. Both physical equilibrium processes of CO(2) between water and air according to Henrys law as well as physiological effects, including sap flow and local respiration, concurrently contributed to these temporal variations. Moreover, the explanatory power of potential biological drivers (stem radius changes, sap flow and soil respiration) varied strongly with season and temporal resolution. We conclude that seasonal and daily courses of stem [CO(2)] in spruce trees are a combined effect of physical equilibrium and tree physiological processes. Furthermore, we emphasize the relevance of axial diffusion of CO(2) along air-filled spaces in the wood, and potential wound response processes owing to sensor installation.
Annals of Forest Science | 2015
Peter Waldner; Anne Thimonier; Elisabeth Graf Pannatier; Sophia Etzold; Maria Schmitt; Aldo Marchetto; Pasi Rautio; Kirsti Derome; Tiina M. Nieminen; Seppo Nevalainen; Antti-Jussi Lindroos; Päivi Merilä; Georg Kindermann; Markus Neumann; Nathalie Cools; Bruno De Vos; Peter Roskams; Arne Verstraeten; Karin Hansen; Gunilla Pihl Karlsson; Hans-Peter Dietrich; Stephan Raspe; Richard Fischer; Martin Lorenz; Susanne Iost; Oliver Granke; Tanja G.M. Sanders; Alexa Michel; Hans-Dieter Nagel; Thomas Scheuschner
Key messageExceedance of critical limits in soil solution samples was more frequent in intensively monitored forest plots across Europe with critical loads for acidity and eutrophication exceeded compared to other plots from the same network. Elevated inorganic nitrogen concentrations in soil solution tended to be related to less favourable nutritional status.ContextForests have been exposed to elevated atmospheric deposition of acidifying and eutrophying sulphur and nitrogen compounds for decades. Critical loads have been identified, below which damage due to acidification and eutrophication are not expected to occur.AimsWe explored the relationship between the exceedance of critical loads and inorganic nitrogen concentration, the base cation to aluminium ratio in soil solutions, as well as the nutritional status of trees.MethodsWe used recent data describing deposition, elemental concentrations in soil solution and foliage, as well as the level of damage to foliage recorded at forest plots of the ICP Forests intensive monitoring network across Europe.ResultsCritical loads for inorganic nitrogen deposition were exceeded on about a third to half of the forest plots. Elevated inorganic nitrogen concentrations in soil solution occurred more frequently among these plots. Indications of nutrient imbalances, such as low magnesium concentration in foliage or discolouration of needles and leaves, were seldom but appeared more frequently on plots where the critical limits for soil solution were exceeded.ConclusionThe findings support the hypothesis that elevated nitrogen and sulphur deposition can lead to imbalances in tree nutrition.
Climate Research | 2009
H. E. Ahrends; Sophia Etzold; Werner L. Kutsch; R. Stoeckli; R. Bruegger; Heinz Wanner; Nina Buchmann; Werner Eugster
Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2009
Eva van Gorsel; Nicolas Delpierre; Ray Leuning; Andy Black; J. William Munger; Steven C. Wofsy; Marc Aubinet; Jason Beringer; Damien Bonal; Baozhang Chen; Jiquan Chen; Robert Clement; Kenneth J. Davis; Ankur R. Desai; Danilo Dragoni; Sophia Etzold; Thomas Grünwald; Lianhong Gu; B. Heinesch; Lucy R. Hutyra; Wilma Jans; Werner L. Kutsch; Beverly E. Law; Monique Y. Leclerc; Ivan Mammarella; Leonardo Montagnani; Asko Noormets; Corinna Rebmann; Sonia Wharton
Ecosystems | 2011
Sophia Etzold; Nadine K. Ruehr; Roman Zweifel; Matthias Dobbertin; Andreas Zingg; Peter Pluess; Rudolf Häsler; Werner Eugster; Nina Buchmann
Forest Ecology and Management | 2014
Sophia Etzold; Peter Waldner; Anne Thimonier; Maria Schmitt; Matthias Dobbertin
Biogeosciences | 2010
Sophia Etzold; Nina Buchmann; Werner Eugster
Biogeosciences | 2014
S. Zielis; Sophia Etzold; Roman Zweifel; Werner Eugster; Matthias Haeni; Nina Buchmann