Carbon dioxide and the uneasy interactions of trees and savannah grasses

被引:323
作者
Bond, William J. [1 ]
Midgley, Guy F. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cape Town, Dept Bot, ZA-7701 Rondebosch, South Africa
[2] S African Natl Biodivers Inst, Climate Change & Bioadaptat Programme, ZA-7735 Cape Town, South Africa
关键词
vegetation fires; woody thickening; bush encroachment; C-4; grass; ELEVATED ATMOSPHERIC CO2; WOODY VEGETATION STRUCTURE; GLOBAL VEGETATION; C-4; PHOTOSYNTHESIS; GROWTH-RESPONSES; AFRICAN SAVANNA; FIRE; FOREST; ECOSYSTEM; CLIMATE;
D O I
10.1098/rstb.2011.0182
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Savannahs are a mixture of trees and grasses often occurring as alternate states to closed forests. Savannah fires are frequent where grass productivity is high in the wet season. Fires help maintain grassy vegetation where the climate is suitable for woodlands or forests. Saplings in savannahs are particularly vulnerable to topkill of above-ground biomass. Larger trees are more fire-resistant and suffer little damage when burnt. Recruitment to large mature tree size classes depends on sapling growth rates to fire-resistant sizes and the time between fires. Carbon dioxide (CO2) can influence the growth rate of juvenile plants, thereby affecting tree recruitment and the conversion of open savannahs to woodlands. Trees have increased in many savannahs throughout the world, whereas some humid savannahs are being invaded by forests. CO2 has been implicated in this woody increase but attribution to global drivers has been controversial where changes in grazing and fire have also occurred. We report on diverse tests of the magnitude of CO2 effects on both ancient and modern ecosystems with a particular focus on African savannahs. Large increases in trees of mesic savannahs in the region cannot easily be explained by land use change but are consistent with experimental and simulation studies of CO2 effects. Changes in arid savannahs seem less obviously linked to CO2 effects and may be driven more by overgrazing. Large-scale shifts in the tree-grass balance in the past and the future need to be better understood. They not only have major impacts on the ecology of grassy ecosystems but also on Earth-atmosphere linkages and the global carbon cycle in ways that are still being discovered.
引用
收藏
页码:601 / 612
页数:12
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