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Symposium

Carbon cycling in tropical ecosystems

23rd New Phytologist Symposium

17 November 2009 - 20 November 2009
Guangzhou, China

Scope

The diverse assemblage of ecosystems in tropical regions of the Earth holds a large fraction of the terrestrial biosphere’s carbon stock, and the annual exchange between tropical ecosystems (plants and soils) and the atmosphere is a critical controller of the CO2 concentration of the atmosphere and hence of climate. Large-scale changes in the structure and function of tropical ecosystems, whether from the pressures of development or the impacts of drought, can alter the balance in the annual exchange of carbon with far reaching implications for the pace of climate change. Global models that couple the Earth’s climate system to the carbon cycle must, therefore, characterize well the biogeochemical and ecophysiological processes of tropical ecosystems and their sensitivity to atmospheric and climatic change. In this symposium we will define the issues of carbon cycling in tropical environments at global and regional scales. We will then consider the evidence from research in plant physiology and plant-soil interactions and how that research can inform larger-scale analyses. We will consider all tropical regions, but our presence in South China puts a special emphasis on the tropical ecosystems of China, how they are changing, and the emerging research from the region.

Abstract book

Download the 23rd NPS abstract book

Organising committee

Ian Alexander, University of Aberdeen, UK

Yiqi Luo, University of Oklahoma, USA

Juxiu Liu, South China Botanical Garden, China

Rich Norby, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, USA

Xuli Tang, South China Botanical Garden, China

Yan Yu, South China Botanical Garden, China

Guoyi Zhou, South China Botanical Garden, China

Helen Pinfield-Wells, New Phytologist, Lancaster, UK