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(2002) Grassland Responses to Global Environmental Changes Suppressed by Elevated CO2

Authors
Shaw M.R. , Zavaleta E.S. , Chiariello N.R. , Cleland E.E. , Mooney H.A. , Field C.B.
Source
Science Magazine (96)
Type
P - Paper (2851)
Peer Review
2 - Medium (2288)
Audience
S - Specialist (3514)
Pages
1987-1990
Journal Number
298
Notes

Abstract
Simulated global changes, including warming, increased precipitation, and nitrogen deposition, alone and in concert, increased net primary production (NPP) in the third year of ecosystem-scale manipulations in a California annual grassland. Elevated carbon dioxide also increased NPP, but only as a single-factor treatment. Across all multifactor manipulations, elevated carbon dioxide suppressed root allocation, decreasing the positive effects of increased temperature, precipitation, and nitrogen deposition on NPP. The NPP responses to interacting global changes differed greatly from simple combinations of single-factor responses. These findings indicate the importance of a multifactor experimental approach to understanding ecosystem responses to global change.

World_link Resources online

Folder Categories
Carbon Dioxide Grasslands Plants Data Availability
 
Tag_blue Keywords
ecosystem changes Net Primary Productivity (NPP) global change
 
Map Countries
United States
 
Map Regions
North America
 

Entered by: Elaine Brown, 5/2010

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