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  5. Thermal acclimation dampens the warming-induced increase in ecosystem respiration

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Preprint
en
2025

Thermal acclimation dampens the warming-induced increase in ecosystem respiration

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en
2025
DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-5718150/v1

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Dennis Baldocchi
Dennis Baldocchi

University of California, Berkeley

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Junna Wang
David Reed
Aimée T. Classen
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Abstract

Abstract Global warming increases ecosystem respiration (ER), creating a positive carbon-climate feedback. Thermal acclimation, the direct responses of biological communities to reduce the effects of temperature changes on respiration rates, is a critical mechanism that compensates for warming-induced ER increases and dampens this positive feedback. However, the extent and effects of this mechanism across diverse ecosystems remain unclear. By analyzing CO2 flux data from 93 eddy covariance sites worldwide, we observed thermal acclimation at 84 % of the sites. If sustained, thermal acclimation could reduce projected warming-induced nighttime ER increases by at least 25 % across most climate zones by 2041-2060. Strong thermal acclimation is particularly evident in ecosystems at high elevation, with low-carbon-content soils, and within tundra, semi-arid, and warm-summer Mediterranean climates, supporting the hypothesis that extreme environments favor the evolution of greater acclimation potential. Moreover, ecosystems with dense vegetation and high productivity such as humid tropical and subtropical forests generally exhibit strong thermal acclimation, suggesting that regions with substantial CO2 uptake may continue to serve as strong carbon sinks. Conversely, some ecosystems in cold continental climates show signs of enhancing thermal responses, the opposite of thermal acclimation, which could exacerbate carbon losses as climate warms. Our study underscores the widespread yet climate-specific patterns of thermal acclimation in global terrestrial ER, emphasizing the need to incorporate these patterns into Earth System Models for more accurate carbon-climate feedback projections.

How to cite this publication

Junna Wang, David Reed, Aimée T. Classen, Alexander Knohl, Andrej Varlagin, Andrew P. Ouimette, Ankur R. Desai, Bernard Heinesch, Chad Hanson, Christopher M. Gough, Christopher J. Still, Damien Bonal, Dan Yakir, Dennis Baldocchi, Eeva‐Stiina Tuittila, Enrique P. Sánchez‐Cañete, Enrique R. Vivoni, E. S. Euskirchen, Giovanni Manca, Gregory Starr, Guillaume Simioni, Jean‐Marc Limousin, Jeffrey D. Wood, Jiquan Chen, Jiří Dušek, Ladislav Šigut, Leonardo Montagnani, Lianhong Gu, M. Altaf Arain, M. Syndonia Bret‐Harte, Marius Schmidt, Masahito Ueyama, Matthias Peichl, Mirco Rodeghiero, Nicolas Delpierre, Nina Buchmann, Peter D. Blanken, Ralf M. Staebler, Sparkle L. Malone (2025). Thermal acclimation dampens the warming-induced increase in ecosystem respiration. , DOI: https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-5718150/v1.

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Publication Details

Type

Preprint

Year

2025

Authors

39

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

en

DOI

https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-5718150/v1

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