Stéphane Ponton
Institut national de la recherche agronomique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Stéphane Ponton.
Global Change Biology | 2014
Lucy Rowland; T. C. Hill; Clément Stahl; Lukas Siebicke; Benoit Burban; Joana Zaragoza-Castells; Stéphane Ponton; Damien Bonal; Patrick Meir; Mathew Williams
The relative contribution of gross primary production and ecosystem respiration to seasonal changes in the net carbon flux of tropical forests remains poorly quantified by both modelling and field studies. We use data assimilation to combine nine ecological time series from an eastern Amazonian forest, with mass balance constraints from an ecosystem carbon cycle model. The resulting analysis quantifies, with uncertainty estimates, the seasonal changes in the net carbon flux of a tropical rainforest which experiences a pronounced dry season. We show that the carbon accumulation in this forest was four times greater in the dry season than in the wet season and that this was accompanied by a 5% increase in the carbon use efficiency. This seasonal response was caused by a dry season increase in gross primary productivity, in response to radiation and a similar magnitude decrease in heterotrophic respiration, in response to drying soils. The analysis also predicts increased carbon allocation to leaves and wood in the wet season, and greater allocation to fine roots in the dry season. This study demonstrates implementation of seasonal variations in parameters better enables models to simulate observed patterns in data. In particular, we highlight the necessity to simulate the seasonal patterns of heterotrophic respiration to accurately simulate the net carbon flux seasonal tropical forest.
Plant Cell and Environment | 2011
Damien Bonal; Stéphane Ponton; Didier Le Thiec; Béatrice Richard; Nathalie Ningre; Bruno Hérault; Jérôme Ogée; Sophie Gonzalez; Marc Pignal; Daniel Sabatier; Jean-Marc Guehl
We assessed the extent of recent environmental changes on leaf morphological (stomatal density, stomatal surface, leaf mass per unit area) and physiological traits (carbon isotope composition, δ(13)C(leaf) , and discrimination, Δ(13)C(leaf) , oxygen isotope composition, δ(18)O(leaf) ) of two tropical rainforest species (Dicorynia guianensis; Humiria balsamifera) that are abundant in the Guiana shield (Northern Amazonia). Leaf samples were collected in different international herbariums to cover a 200 year time-period (1790-2004) and the whole Guiana shield. Using models describing carbon and oxygen isotope fractionations during photosynthesis, different scenarios of change in intercellular CO(2) concentrations inside the leaf (C(i)), stomatal conductance (g), and photosynthesis (A) were tested in order to understand leaf physiological response to increasing air CO(2) concentrations (C(a)). Our results confirmed that both species displayed physiological response to changing C(a) . For both species, we observed a decrease of about 1.7‰ in δ(13)C(leaf) since 1950, without significant change in Δ(13)C(leaf) and leaf morphological traits. Furthermore, there was no clear change in δ(18)O(leaf) for Humiria over this period. Our simulation approach revealed that an increase in A, rather than a decrease in g, explained the observed trends for these tropical rainforest species, allowing them to maintain a constant ratio of C(i)/C(a) .
Plant and Soil | 2009
Nicolas Chemidlin Prévost-Bouré; Jérôme Ngao; Daniel Berveiller; Damien Bonal; Claire Damesin; Eric Dufrêne; Jean-Christophe Lata; Valérie Le Dantec; Bernard Longdoz; Stéphane Ponton; Kamel Soudani; Daniel Epron
Disentangling the autotrophic and heterotrophic components of soil CO2 efflux is critical to understanding the role of soil system in terrestrial carbon (C) cycling. In this study, we combined a stable C-isotope natural abundance approach with the trenched plot method to determine if root exclusion significantly affected the isotopic composition (δ13C) of soil CO2 efflux (RS). This study was performed in different forest ecosystems: a tropical rainforest and two temperate broadleaved forests, where trenched plots had previously been installed. At each site, RS and its δ13C (δ13CRs) tended to be lower in trenched plots than in control plots. Contrary to RS, δ13CRs differences were not significant. This observation is consistent with the small differences in δ13C measured on organic matter from root, litter and soil. The lack of an effect on δ13CRs by root exclusion could be from the small difference in δ13C between autotrophic and heterotrophic soil respirations, but further investigations are needed because of potential artefacts associated with the root exclusion technique.
Global Change Biology | 2008
Damien Bonal; Alexandre Bosc; Stéphane Ponton; Jean-Yves Goret; Benoit Burban; P. Gross; Jean-Marc Bonnefond; J.A. Elbers; Bernard Longdoz; Daniel Epron; Jean-Marc Guehl; André Granier
Plant Cell and Environment | 2001
Stéphane Ponton; Jean-Luc Dupouey; Nathalie Bréda; F. Feuillat; C. Bodénès; Erwin Dreyer
Tree Physiology | 2002
Stéphane Ponton; Jean-Luc Dupouey; Nathalie Bréda; Erwin Dreyer
Plant and Soil | 2009
Laetitia Magali Brechet; Stéphane Ponton; Jacques Roy; Vincent Freycon; Marie-Madeleine Coûteaux; Damien Bonal; Daniel Epron
Annals of Forest Science | 2004
Stéphane Ponton; Jean-Luc Dupouey; Erwin Dreyer
Forest Ecology and Management | 2019
Stéphane Ponton; Yoran Bornot; Nathalie Bréda
Archive | 2011
Damien Bonal; Stéphane Ponton; Didier Le Thiec; Béatrice Richard; Nathalie Ningre; Bruno Hérault; Jérôme Ogée; Sophie Gonzalez; Marc Pignal; Daniel Sabatier; Jean-Marc Guehl; French Guiana; Inra Bordeaux