Труды сотрудников ИЛ им. В.Н. Сукачева СО РАН

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Найдено документов в текущей БД: 2

    Climatic and geographic patterns of river runoff formation in Northern Eurasia
[Text] / A. . Onuchin [et al.] // Adv. Water Resour. - 2006. - Vol. 29, Is. 9. - P1314-1327, DOI 10.1016/j.advwatres.2005.10.006. - Cited References: 28 . - 14. - ISSN 0309-1708
РУБ Water Resources
Рубрики:
LAND-USE
   DISCHARGE

   MEUSE

Кл.слова (ненормированные):
river runoff -- land use -- Siberia -- river discharge -- climatology -- permafrost

Аннотация: Siberian rivers are of global importance as they impact on the freshwater budget of the Arctic Ocean, which affects the Thermo-Haline circulation in the North Atlantic Ocean. Siberian rivers, in particular the tributaries to the larger rivers, are under-represented in the international river-regime databases. The runoff of three Russian rivers in the Central Siberian taiga (Kureyka, Karabula and Erba) is modelled to analyse the relative influence of climate. In addition three rivers (Rhine, Maas and Odra) in Western Europe are similarly assessed as a control. The results show that the role of precipitation and autocorrelation as factors in the formation of river runoff is stronger under oceanic climate conditions, increasing from the central regions of Northern Eurasia towards the Arctic Ocean in the North and the Atlantic in the West. At the same time the influence of summer temperatures is weakened. The formation of Northern Eurasian river runoff appears to be influenced by periodically thawing top horizons of permafrost soil. Time served as an indicator for land use change after inclusion of meteorological data in the models. Maas and Erba showed a significant influence of the time factor. For the Erba the onset of agricultural land use in the catchment coincides with a drop in runoff. A similar causal relationship is suggested for the Maas. Land use can change the formation of runoff, which in turn can be used as an environmental indicator for sustainable land use. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Полный текст,
WOS,
Scopus

Держатели документа:
Ctr Ecol & Hydrol, Climate & Land Surface Syst Interact Ctr, Huntingdon PE28 2LS, Cambs, England
Russian Acad Sci, VN Sukachev Inst Forest, Siberian Branch, Krasnoyarsk 660036, Russia
CEH, Wallingford OX10 8BB, Oxon, England

Доп.точки доступа:
Onuchin, A...; Balzter, H...; Borisova, H...; Blyth, E...

    Productivity of forests in the Eurosiberian boreal region and their potential to act as a carbon sink - a synthesis
[Text] / E. D. Schulze [et al.] // Glob. Change Biol. - 1999. - Vol. 5, Is. 6. - P703-722, DOI 10.1046/j.1365-2486.1999.00266.x. - Cited References: 93 . - 20. - ISSN 1354-1013
РУБ Biodiversity Conservation + Ecology + Environmental Sciences

Аннотация: Based on review and original data, this synthesis investigates carbon pools and fluxes of Siberian and European forests (600 and 300 million ha, respectively). We examine the productivity of ecosystems, expressed as positive rate when the amount of carbon in the ecosystem increases, while (following micrometeorological convention) downward fluxes from the atmosphere to the vegetation (NEE=Net Ecosystem Exchange) are expressed as negative numbers. Productivity parameters are Net Primary Productivity (NPP=whole plant growth), Net Ecosystem Productivity (NEP = CO2 assimilation minus ecosystem respiration), and Net Biome Productivity (NBP=NEP minus carbon losses through disturbances bypassing respiration, e.g. by fire and logging). Based on chronosequence studies and national forestry statistics we estimate a low average NPP for boreal forests in Siberia: 123 gC m(-2) y(-1). This contrasts with a similar calculation for Europe which suggests a much higher average NPP of 460 gC m(-2) y(-1) for the forests there. Despite a smaller area, European forests have a higher total NPP than Siberia (1.2-1.6 vs. 0.6-0.9 x 10(15) gC region(-1) y(-1)). This arises as a consequence of differences in growing season length, climate and nutrition. For a chronosequence of Pinus sylvestris stands studied in central Siberia during summer, NEE was most negative in a 67-y old stand regenerating after fire (-192 mmol m(-2) d(-1)) which is close to NEE in a cultivated forest of Germany (-210 mmol m(-2) d(-1)). Considerable net ecosystem CO2-uptake was also measured in Siberia in 200- and 215-y old stands (NEE:174 and - 63 mmol m(-2) d(-1)) while NEP of 7- and 13-y old logging areas were close to the ecosystem compensation point. Two Siberian bogs and a bog in European Russia were also significant carbon sinks (-102 to - 104 mmol m(-2) d(-1)). Integrated over a growing season (June to September) we measured a total growing season NEE of -14 mol m(-2) summer(-1) (-168 gC m(-2) summer(-1)) in a 200-y Siberian pine stand and -5 mol m(-2) summer(-1) (-60 gC m(-2) summer(-1)) in Siberian and European Russian bogs. By contrast, over the same period, a spruce forest in European Russia was a carbon source to the atmosphere of (NEE: + 7 mol m(-2) summer(-1) = + 84 gC m(-2) summer(-1)). Two years after a windthrow in European Russia, with all trees being uplifted and few successional species, lost 16 mol C m(-2) to the atmosphere over a 3-month in summer, compared to the cumulative NEE over a growing season in a German forest of -15.5 mol m(-2) summer(-1) (-186 gC m(-2) summer(-1); European flux network annual averaged - 205 gC m(-2) y(-1)). Differences in CO2-exchange rates coincided with differences in the Bowen ratio, with logging areas partitioning most incoming radiation into sensible heat whereas bogs partitioned most into evaporation (latent heat). Effects of these different surface energy exchanges on local climate (convective storms and fires) and comparisons with the Canadian BOREAS experiment are discussed. Following a classification of disturbances and their effects on ecosystem carbon balances, fire and logging are discussed as the main processes causing carbon losses that bypass heterotrophic respiration in Siberia. Following two approaches, NBP was estimated to be only about 13-16 mmol m(-2) y(-1) for Siberia. It may reach 67 mmol m(-2) y(-1) in North America, and about 140-400 mmol m(-2) y(-1) in Scandinavia. We conclude that fire speeds up the carbon cycle, but that it results also in long-term carbon sequestration by charcoal formation. For at least 14 years after logging, regrowth forests remain net sources of CO2 to the atmosphere. This has important implications regarding the effects of Siberian forest management on atmospheric concentrations. For many years after logging has taken place, regrowth forests remain weaker sinks for atmospheric CO2 than are nearby old-growth forests.

Полный текст,
WOS,
Scopus

Держатели документа:
Max Planck Inst Biogeochem, D-07701 Jena, Germany
Landcare Res, Lincoln, New Zealand
Russian Acad Sci, Inst Evolut & Ecol, Moscow 117071, Russia
Univ Tubingen, Inst Bot, D-72076 Tubingen, Germany
Comenius Univ, Dept Biophys & Chem Phys, Bratislava 84215, Slovakia
Univ Tuscia, Dept Forest Sci & Environm, I-01100 Viterbo, Italy
Moscow MV Lomonosov State Univ, Ecol Travel Ctr, Moscow 119899, Russia
Russian Acad Sci, Siberian Branch, Forest Inst, Krasnoyarsk 660036, Russia

Доп.точки доступа:
Schulze, E.D.; Lloyd, J...; Kelliher, F.M.; Wirth, C...; Rebmann, C...; Luhker, B...; Mund, M...; Knohl, A...; Milyukova, I.M.; Schulze, W...; Ziegler, W...; Varlagin, A.B.; Sogachev, A.F.; Valentini, R...; Dore, S...; Grigoriev, S...; Kolle, O...; Panfyorov, M.I.; Tchebakova, N...; Vygodskaya, N.N.