Modeling climate change effects on the potential production of French plains forests at the sub-regional level

We modeled the effects of climate change and two forest management scenarios on wood production and forest carbon balance in French forests using process-based models of forest growth. We combined data from the national forest inventory and soil network survey, which were aggregated over a 50 x 50-k...

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Veröffentlicht in:Tree physiology 2005-07, Vol.25 (7), p.813-823
Hauptverfasser: Loustau, D, Bosc, A, Colin, A, Ogee, J, Davi, H, Francois, C, Dufrene, E, Deque, M, Cloppet, E, Arrouays, D
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container_end_page 823
container_issue 7
container_start_page 813
container_title Tree physiology
container_volume 25
creator Loustau, D
Bosc, A
Colin, A
Ogee, J
Davi, H
Francois, C
Dufrene, E
Deque, M
Cloppet, E
Arrouays, D
description We modeled the effects of climate change and two forest management scenarios on wood production and forest carbon balance in French forests using process-based models of forest growth. We combined data from the national forest inventory and soil network survey, which were aggregated over a 50 x 50-km grid, i.e., the spatial resolution of the climate scenario data. We predicted and analyzed the climate impact on potential forest production over the period 1960-2100. All models predicted a slight increase in potential forest yield until 2030-2050, followed by a plateau or a decline around 2070-2100, with overall, a greater increase in yield in northern France than in the south. Gross and net primary productivities were more negatively affected by soil water and atmospheric water vapor saturation deficits in western France because of a more pronounced shift in seasonal rainfall from summer to winter. The rotation-averaged values of carbon flux and production for different forest management options were estimated during four years (1980, 2015, 2045 and 2080). Predictions were made using a two-dimensional matrix covering the range of local soil and climate conditions. The changes in ecosystem fluxes and forest production were explained by the counterbalancing effect of rising CO2 concentration and increasing water deficit. The effect of climate change decreased with rotation length from short rotations with high production rates and low standing biomasses to long rotations with low productivities and greater standing biomasses. Climate effects on productivity, both negative and positive, were greatest on high fertility sites. Forest productivity in northern France was enhanced by climate change, increasingly from west to east, whereas in the southwestern Atlantic region, productivity was reduced by climate change to an increasing degree from west to east.
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We combined data from the national forest inventory and soil network survey, which were aggregated over a 50 x 50-km grid, i.e., the spatial resolution of the climate scenario data. We predicted and analyzed the climate impact on potential forest production over the period 1960-2100. All models predicted a slight increase in potential forest yield until 2030-2050, followed by a plateau or a decline around 2070-2100, with overall, a greater increase in yield in northern France than in the south. Gross and net primary productivities were more negatively affected by soil water and atmospheric water vapor saturation deficits in western France because of a more pronounced shift in seasonal rainfall from summer to winter. The rotation-averaged values of carbon flux and production for different forest management options were estimated during four years (1980, 2015, 2045 and 2080). Predictions were made using a two-dimensional matrix covering the range of local soil and climate conditions. The changes in ecosystem fluxes and forest production were explained by the counterbalancing effect of rising CO2 concentration and increasing water deficit. The effect of climate change decreased with rotation length from short rotations with high production rates and low standing biomasses to long rotations with low productivities and greater standing biomasses. Climate effects on productivity, both negative and positive, were greatest on high fertility sites. 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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); MEDLINE
subjects aerial photography
Biomass
Carbon - metabolism
Carbon Dioxide - metabolism
climate change
Computer Simulation
Ecosystem
Environmental Sciences
Fagus sylvatica
forest management
forest trees
Forestry
France
Global Changes
Greenhouse Effect
growth models
mathematical models
Models, Biological
Pinus pinaster
Pinus sylvestris
Quercus ilex
Quercus petraea
remote sensing
temperate forests
timber production
tree growth
tree yields
Trees - anatomy & histology
Trees - growth & development
Trees - physiology
Water - metabolism
Wood - anatomy & histology
Wood - growth & development
Wood - physiology
title Modeling climate change effects on the potential production of French plains forests at the sub-regional level
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