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Climate change increases carbon allocation to leaves in early leaf green-up.

Fandong MengSongbai HongJiawei WangAnping ChenYao ZhangYichen ZhangIvan A JanssensJiafu MaoRanga B MyneniJosep PenuelasShilong Piao
Published in: Ecology letters (2023)
Global greening, characterized by an increase in leaf area index (LAI), implies an increase in foliar carbon (C). Whether this increase in foliar C under climate change is due to higher photosynthesis or to higher allocation of C to leaves remains unknown. Here, we explored the trends in foliar C accumulation and allocation during leaf green-up from 2000 to 2017 using satellite-derived LAI and solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) across the Northern Hemisphere. The accumulation of foliar C accelerated in the early green-up period due to both increased photosynthesis and higher foliar C allocation driven by climate change. In the late stage of green-up, however, we detected decreasing trends in foliar C accumulation and foliar C allocation. Such stage-dependent trends in the accumulation and allocation of foliar C are not represented in current terrestrial biosphere models. Our results highlight that a better representation of C allocation should be incorporated into models.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • human health
  • risk assessment
  • single molecule