Manipulations of albedo and mortality of upper canopy leaves in a
tropical forest diverge from Earth System model results
Abstract
How tropical forest leaves respond to climate change has important
implications for the global carbon cycle and biodiversity. Climate
change could impact the energy balance properties of tropical forest
canopies through 1)long-term trait changes and 2)abrupt
disruptions/damage to leaf/photosynthetic machinery. We assessed the
radiative and evaporative impacts of two recently proposed impacts of
climate change on tropical forest canopies: 1) long-term leaf darkening
and 2) leaf death through high temperature extremes. We darkened leaves
to absorb 138 Wm-2 more energy in the upper canopy of a seasonally-dry
tropical moist forest in Panama. 20% of this energy went towards
heating leaves by ~4°C, 3% went towards warming the air,
and 77% went towards evaporative cooling. This leaf warming led to the
appearance of necrosis across 9±5 % of the leaf area on certain
species. In contrast, brightening leaves decreased energy absorbed by an
average of 58 Wm-2, which mainly reduced evaporation (88%) with only
12% reducing leaf temperatures (and no sensible heat flux). This
asymmetrical result suggests leaves may be close to hydraulic
limitations towards the end of the dry season. Similar albedo increases
in a model (CLM 4.0) did not diverge between brightening and darkening
leaves and generally showed sensible heat flux to dominate although
there were strong geographic trends. Heat death in leaves generally
heated nearby leaves (by an average of ~1.35°C) and air
temperature (by 0.5°C), but less than hypothesized because leaf albedo
increased. Overall, our canopy top experiments question important
potential climate feedbacks, but need further study.