Répertoire du personnel
Pauline Hicter
Biologie
Biologie du bois
Biologie du bois
Détails
Hicter, P., Beeckman, H., Bauters, M. & Hubau, W. 2024. ‘Unravelling the carbon cycle at the tree and forest scale : a TREE4FLUX initiative in Central African Tropical Forests ’. European Geosciences Union (EGU) General Assembly 2024. Book of abstracts.
Résumé de colloque
Tropical forests play an essential role in the carbon cycle. However, climate change threatens their
ability to store carbon. Specifically, understanding the perturbation of climatic regimes on carbon
uptake mechanisms is crucial. However, our knowledge concerning the spatial and temporal
carbon distribution over trees and forests is limited, especially in the context of tropical forests of
Central Africa. The TREE4FLUX project aims to fill these gaps for the first time in the forests of
Congo Basin forests, by focusing research at different scales around the CongoFlux tower in the
Yangambi Biosphere Reserve (DRC). On the forest ecosystem scale, carbon uptake can be
monitored by measurements of CO2 exchanges between the atmosphere and the vegetation
using the Eddy Covariance approach. Carbon assessments are also possible through tree-growth
measurements within a network of permanent inventory plots. However, refining the carbon cycle
at the tree scale requires a detailed study of the numerous inextricable metabolic processes that
underlie tree growth, e.g. photosynthesis, wood formation, or respiration. Because they are largely
controlled by various climatic drivers, climate-growth relationships over time remain hard to
establish. The chronology of carbon uptake and attribution to the different mechanisms remain
elusive preventing a grasp of the intra-annual variations of these periodic processes and their
articulation over time. This is the case of xylogenesis or wood formation in which each phase is
differently involved in the carbon cycle and sensitive to various climatic drivers. To understand the
sensitivity of tree growth to climate, we need to untangle the cambium’s role in wood formation.
For that purpose, monitoring cambial phenology helps characterize the distribution, allocation,
and short- and long-term carbon storage in woody material. While tree growth uptakes carbon,
respiration releases carbon into the atmosphere at various levels. Heterotrophic and autotrophic
respirations have a decisive role in the carbon cycle at the forest scale but face significant
misunderstandings in this regard. To upscale our understanding from individual tree to forest
scale, we imperatively need respiration monitoring in both living and decayed trees. This requires
unravelling the metabolic processes driving both autotrophic and heterotrophic respiration, i.e.
the tree growth and decayed process, respectively. Characterization of carbon fluxes according to
an integrative approach over climatic variations is required to understand how environmental
changes affect ecosystem dynamics and their ability to provide ecosystem services.