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Carbon fluxes and partitioning in Eucalyptus and Pinus plantations across a climatic gradient in Brazil

Abstract

Brazilian Eucalyptus and Pinus forests are the most productive forests worldwide. The growth rates of these intensively managed plantations depend strongly on environmental conditions and matching genotypes to local environments. Changing climates underscore the value of understanding the intricacies of how these plantations can fix high amounts of carbon (C) and grow so much wood. We measured the full C budgets of Eucalyptus and Pinus forests across climate gradients in Brazil, focusing on the rates of C uptake, the allocation of C to belowground roots and mycorrhizae, and stem growth. We found that gross primary production (GPP) varied more than sixfold across the climate conditions in Brazil. Maximum temperature was the main climatic driver of productivity, where extreme temperatures reduced fluxes to stem production while increasing fluxes to root production. Net ecosystem production varied with management and age across the sites. The ecophysiological investigation presented in this work is fundamental for understanding C partitioning behavior under extreme temperature conditions. In this way, our results provide tools for forest managers to support their decision-making processes as well as starting points for strategies to be implemented in projects aimed at mitigating the effects of climate change

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Last time updated on 06/01/2026

This paper was published in Agritrop.

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