Free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE): blower effects on wheat canopy microclimate and plant development
نویسندگان
چکیده
Free-air carbon dioxide enrichment (FACE) provides a realistic, cost-effective method for evaluating the effects of supraambient CO2 concentrations on growth, development, yield, and water use of agricultural crops and natural ecosystems with very few of the problems normally associated with glasshouse or chamber type research. There are no walls interfering with incident radiation and no artificial constraints on rooting depth. With current FACE technology, CO2 enriched air is injected around the perimeter of circular plots and natural wind disperses the CO2 across the experimental area. Under stable, nighttime wind conditions found in FACE wheat experiments at Maricopa, Arizona, the blowers used to inject CO2 exerted subtle effects on the microclimate in a manner analogous to wind machines used for orchard frost protection. Plots equipped with blowers had nighttime foliage and air temperatures that averaged 0.6–1.0◦C warmer than controls without blowers. A secondary effect of these elevated temperatures was that plots equipped with blowers displayed differences in dew duration (time that leaves were wet was reduced 30%), plant development (anthesis occurred 4 days earlier), and senescence [as measured with the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI)]. Natural wind and turbulence appear to overcome the blower effect during daytime treatments and on some nights. Aerial thermal imagery (8–12 mm) acquired during the 1998 FACE experiment with grain sorghum provided additional evidence of the blower effect on canopy temperatures. Since increased plant tissue temperatures also occur when elevated CO2 induces partial stomatal closure and reduces transpiration, not all instances of ∗Corresponding author. Tel.: +1-602-379-4356; fax: +1-602-379-4355. E-mail address: [email protected] (P.J. Pinter Jr.) 0168-1923/00/$ – see front matter © 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. PII: S0168 1923 (00 )00150 -7 320 P.J. Pinter Jr. et al. / Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 103 (2000) 319–333 canopy temperature elevation in CO2 enriched plots can be ascribed solely to the presence of blowers. It is concluded that proper controls for FACE facilities should have similar air flows to those used in the FACE plots. Advantages and disadvantages to nighttime CO2 enrichment are discussed. © 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
منابع مشابه
Microclimatic Performance of a Free-Air Warming and CO2 Enrichment Experiment in Windy Wyoming, USA
In order to plan for global changing climate experiments are being conducted in many countries, but few have monitored the effects of the climate change treatments (warming, elevated CO2) on the experimental plot microclimate. During three years of an eight year study with year-round feedback-controlled infra-red heater warming (1.5/3.0°C day/night) and growing season free-air CO2 enrichment (6...
متن کاملPhotosynthesis, carboxylation and leaf nitrogen responses of 16 species to elevated pCO2 across four free-air CO2 enrichment experiments in forest, grassland and desert
The magnitude of changes in carboxylation capacity in dominant plant species under long-term elevated CO2 exposure (elevated pCa) directly impacts ecosystem CO2 assimilation from the atmosphere. We analyzed field CO2 response curves of 16 C3 species of different plant growth forms in favorable growth conditions in four free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE) experiments in a pine and deciduous forest, a...
متن کاملLeaf and canopy conductance in aspen and aspen-birch forests under free-air enrichment of carbon dioxide and ozone.
Increasing concentrations of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) and tropospheric ozone (O3) have the potential to affect tree physiology and structure, and hence forest feedbacks on climate. Here, we investigated how elevated concentrations of CO2 (+45%) and O3 (+35%), alone and in combination, affected conductance for mass transfer at the leaf and canopy levels in pure aspen (Populus tremuloides...
متن کامل24 FACE Value: Perspectives on the Future of Free-Air CO2 Enrichment Studies
Free-air CO2 enrichment (FACE) studies are the ultimate test bed for hypotheses that seek to explain how plants respond to rising [CO2]; and they provide the most realistic conditions for simulating the impact of future elevated (e)[CO2] levels (see Chapter 2). FACE studies have many benefits over controlled environment and open-top chamber (OTC) experiments. FACE allows the investigation of an...
متن کاملIncreases in atmospheric CO2 have little influence on transpiration of a temperate forest canopy.
Models of forest energy, water and carbon cycles assume decreased stomatal conductance with elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration ([CO2]) based on leaf-scale measurements, a response not directly translatable to canopies. Where canopy-atmosphere are well-coupled, [CO2 ]-induced structural changes, such as increasing leaf-area index (LD), may cause, or compensate for, reduced mean canopy stomat...
متن کامل