ALPECOLE
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Alpine plants' carbon relations and growth

The carbon balance of alpine ecosystems

 

The carbon balance of an ecosystem is the difference between the long term uptake and loss of carbon over a larger area.

1 - Carbon balance of an ecosystem

 

Since an increasingly larger fraction of the alpine landscape is barren as one moves from the treeline to the highest peaks, the average C storage per unit of land area is commonly much smaller, about 5-10 kg m-2 in the Swiss Alps between 2000 and 2600 m altitude, as compared to below alpine elevations (Fig. 2).

2 - The soil carbon reservoir of Switzerland (Paulsen 1995).

 

In late successional ecosystems the carbon balance is commonly close to zero, which means that the C-pool is constant. This has been confirmed for alpine grass heaths and alpine dwarf shrub heaths in the Alps. There are two major ways through which the C-balance can be positive or negative. C-accretion can happen during colonisation of raw substrates (e.g. after the retreat of a glacier) and a loss of carbon can result from soil disturbance (e.g. overgrazing, erosion, trampling, building of ski slopes etc.).

 

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29 August 2011
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