Abstract:
Tropical forests cover large areas of equatorial Africa and play a significant role in the global carbon cycle. However, there has been a lack of in-situ measurements to understand the forests’ gross and net primary productivity (GPP and NPP) and their allocation. In this seminar I will present the first detailed field assessment of the carbon budget of multiple forest sites in Africa, by monitoring 14 one-hectare plots along an aridity gradient in Ghana. When compared with an equivalent aridity gradient in Amazonia using the same measurement protocol, the studied West African forests generally had higher GPP and NPP and lower carbon use efficiency (CUE). The West African aridity gradient consistently shows the highest NPP, CUE, GPP, and autotrophic respiration at a medium-aridity site, Bobiri. Notably, NPP and GPP of the site are the highest yet reported anywhere in the tropics using similar methods. Widely used data products (MODIS and FLUXCOM) substantially underestimate productivity when compared to in situ measurements, in Amazonia and especially in Africa. I will also discuss likely reasons for the West-African forests high productivity and the cause of the data-model discrepancy.
Speaker: Dr. Huanyuan Zhang-Zheng
Affiliation: University of Oxford
Time: 4:30 PM, Tuesday, Sept. 19, 2023
Venue: ZOOM 会议平台 会议 ID:312 430 8960 会议密码 PWD:666666
ZOOM
会议 ID:312 430 8960
会议密码 PWD:666666