Abstract

Modelling net primary production (NPP) in eastern deciduous forests has usually been conducted with coarse scale models that lump or simplify physiological processes. Foliar respiration ( R d) is a key physiological process in forest ecosystem C cycling; however, there are very few data on leaf respiration ( R d) for deciduous hardwood species. As a result, leaf R d is one of the most superficially treated processes in NPP models. We hypothesize that these data are critical for understanding patterns of net primary production and for parameterizing C cycling models in diverse eastern deciduous hardwood forests. Our objectives were: (1) to determine differences in leaf R d for seven hardwood species ( Acer rubrum, Liriodendron tulipifera, Quercus alba, Quercus coccinea, Quercus rubra, Quercus prinus and Carya glabra) common to the canopy of southern Appalachian forests; and (2) to evaluate the effects of using ‘lumped parameter’ versus ‘species-specific parameter’ approaches to determining the leaf respiration component of NPP. We used a temperature-controlled cuvette and an infrared gas analyzer to develop temperature response curves during the night (24:00–06:00 h). Differences in leaf respiration rates (expressed on either a mass or area basis) among species were substantial, varying by greater than three-fold at high leaf temperatures (30°C). Q 10 values ranged from 1.97 to 2.44. Some of the variation in leaf respiration rates among species was related to differences in leaf N. Comparison with a lumped parameter model of leaf respiration (PnET-II) indicated good agreement on average due primarily to combinations of species which resulted in compensating errors; however, there was the potential for considerable variation with different mixes of species.

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