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Primary production

In ecology, primary production is the synthesis of organic compounds from atmospheric or aqueous carbon dioxide. It principally occurs through the process of photosynthesis, which uses light as its source of energy, but it also occurs through chemosynthesis, which uses the oxidation or reduction of inorganic chemical compounds as its source of energy. Almost all life on Earth relies directly or indirectly on primary production. The organisms responsible for primary production are known as primary producers or autotrophs, and form the base of the food chain. In terrestrial ecoregions, these are mainly plants, while in aquatic ecoregions algae predominate in this role. Ecologists distinguish primary production as either net or gross, the former accounting for losses to processes such as cellular respiration, the latter not.

Global oceanic and terrestrial photoautotroph abundance, from September 1997 to August 2000. As an estimate of autotroph biomass, it is only a rough indicator of primary-production potential, and not an actual estimate of it. Provided by the SeaWiFS Project, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center and GeoEye.

Overview

 
The Calvin cycle of photosynthesis

Primary production is the production of chemical energy in organic compounds by living organisms. The main source of this energy is sunlight but a minute fraction of primary production is driven by lithotrophic organisms using the chemical energy of inorganic molecules.

Regardless of its source, this energy is used to synthesize complex organic molecules from simpler inorganic compounds such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and water (H2O). The following two equations are simplified representations of photosynthesis (top) and (one form of) chemosynthesis (bottom):

CO2 + H2O + light → CH2O + O2
CO2 + O2 + 4 H2S → CH2O + 4 S + 3 H2O

In both cases, the end point is a polymer of reduced carbohydrate, (CH2O)n, typically molecules such as glucose or other sugars. These relatively simple molecules may be then used to further synthesise more complicated molecules, including proteins, complex carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids, or be respired to perform work. Consumption of primary producers by heterotrophic organisms, such as animals, then transfers these organic molecules (and the energy stored within them) up the food web, fueling all of the Earth's living systems.

Gross primary production and net primary production

Gross primary production (GPP) is the amount of chemical energy, typically expressed as carbon biomass, that primary producers create in a given length of time. Some fraction of this fixed energy is used by primary producers for cellular respiration and maintenance of existing tissues (i.e., "growth respiration" and "maintenance respiration").[1][2] The remaining fixed energy (i.e., mass of photosynthate) is referred to as net primary production (NPP).

NPP = GPP - respiration [by plants]

Net primary production is the rate at which all the autotrophs in an ecosystem produce net useful chemical energy. Net primary production is available to be directed toward growth and reproduction of primary producers. As such it is available for consumption by herbivores.

Both gross and net primary production are typically expressed in units of mass per unit area per unit time interval. In terrestrial ecosystems, mass of carbon per unit area per year (g C m−2 yr−1) is most often used as the unit of measurement. Note that a distinction is sometimes drawn between "production" and "productivity", with the former the quantity of material produced (g C m−2), the latter the rate at which it is produced (g C m−2 yr−1), but these terms are more typically used interchangeably.

Terrestrial production

This animation shows Earth's monthly terrestrial net primary productivity from 2000 to 2013. Values range from near 0 grams of carbon per square meter per day (tan) to 6.5 grams per square meter per day (dark green). A negative value means decomposition or respiration overpowered carbon absorption; more carbon was released to the atmosphere than the plants took in. In mid-latitudes, productivity obviously interacts with seasonal change, with productivity peaking in each hemisphere's summer. The data come from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on NASA's Terra satellite.[3]

On the land, almost all primary production is now performed by vascular plants, with a small fraction coming from algae and non-vascular plants such as mosses and liverworts. Before the evolution of vascular plants, non-vascular plants likely played a more significant role. Primary production on land is a function of many factors, but principally local hydrology and temperature (the latter covaries to an extent with light, specifically photosynthetically active radiation (PAR), the source of energy for photosynthesis). While plants cover much of the Earth's surface, they are strongly curtailed wherever temperatures are too extreme or where necessary plant resources (principally water and PAR) are limiting, such as deserts or polar regions.

Water is "consumed" in plants by the processes of photosynthesis (see above) and transpiration. The latter process (which is responsible for about 90% of water use) is driven by the evaporation of water from the leaves of plants. Transpiration allows plants to transport water and mineral nutrients from the soil to growth regions, and also cools the plant. Diffusion of water vapour out of a leaf, the force that drives transpiration, is regulated by structures known as stomata. These structures also regulate the diffusion of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere into the leaf, such that decreasing water loss (by partially closing stomata) also decreases carbon dioxide gain. Certain plants use alternative forms of photosynthesis, called Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) and C4. These employ physiological and anatomical adaptations to increase water-use efficiency and allow increased primary production to take place under conditions that would normally limit carbon fixation by C3 plants (the majority of plant species).

As shown in the animation, the boreal forests of Canada and Russia experience high productivity in June and July and then a slow decline through fall and winter. Year-round, tropical forests in South America, Africa, Southeast Asia, and Indonesia have high productivity, not surprising with the abundant sunlight, warmth, and rainfall. However, even in the tropics, there are variations in productivity over the course of the year. For example, the Amazon basin exhibits especially high productivity from roughly August through October - the period of the area's dry season. Because the trees have access to a plentiful supply of ground water that builds up in the rainy season, they grow better when the rainy skies clear and allow more sunlight to reach the forest.[3]

Oceanic production

 
Marine diatoms; an example of planktonic microalgae

In a reversal of the pattern on land, in the oceans, almost all photosynthesis is performed by algae, with a small fraction contributed by vascular plants and other groups. Algae encompass a diverse range of organisms, ranging from single floating cells to attached seaweeds. They include photoautotrophs from a variety of groups. Eubacteria are important photosynthetizers in both oceanic and terrestrial ecosystems, and while some archaea are phototrophic, none are known to utilise oxygen-evolving photosynthesis.[4] A number of eukaryotes are significant contributors to primary production in the ocean, including green algae, brown algae and red algae, and a diverse group of unicellular groups. Vascular plants are also represented in the ocean by groups such as the seagrasses.

Unlike terrestrial ecosystems, the majority of primary production in the ocean is performed by free-living microscopic organisms called phytoplankton. Larger autotrophs, such as the seagrasses and macroalgae (seaweeds) are generally confined to the littoral zone and adjacent shallow waters, where they can attach to the underlying substrate but still be within the photic zone. There are exceptions, such as Sargassum, but the vast majority of free-floating production takes place within microscopic organisms.

 
Differences in relative photosynthesis between plankton species under different irradiance

The factors limiting primary production in the ocean are also very different from those on land. The availability of water, obviously, is not an issue (though its salinity can be). Similarly, temperature, while affecting metabolic rates (see Q10), ranges less widely in the ocean than on land because the heat capacity of seawater buffers temperature changes, and the formation of sea ice insulates it at lower temperatures. However, the availability of light, the source of energy for photosynthesis, and mineral nutrients, the building blocks for new growth, play crucial roles in regulating primary production in the ocean.[5] Available Earth System Models suggest that ongoing ocean bio-geochemical changes could trigger reductions in ocean NPP between 3% and 10% of current values depending on the emissions scenario.[6]

Light

 
A kelp forest; an example of attached macroalgae

The sunlit zone of the ocean is called the photic zone (or euphotic zone). This is a relatively thin layer (10–100 m) near the ocean's surface where there is sufficient light for photosynthesis to occur. For practical purposes, the thickness of the photic zone is typically defined by the depth at which light reaches 1% of its surface value. Light is attenuated down the water column by its absorption or scattering by the water itself, and by dissolved or particulate material within it (including phytoplankton).

Net photosynthesis in the water column is determined by the interaction between the photic zone and the mixed layer. Turbulent mixing by wind energy at the ocean's surface homogenises the water column vertically until the turbulence dissipates (creating the aforementioned mixed layer). The deeper the mixed layer, the lower the average amount of light intercepted by phytoplankton within it. The mixed layer can vary from being shallower than the photic zone, to being much deeper than the photic zone. When it is much deeper than the photic zone, this results in phytoplankton spending too much time in the dark for net growth to occur. The maximum depth of the mixed layer in which net growth can occur is called the critical depth. As long as there are adequate nutrients available, net primary production occurs whenever the mixed layer is shallower than the critical depth.

Both the magnitude of wind mixing and the availability of light at the ocean's surface are affected across a range of space- and time-scales. The most characteristic of these is the seasonal cycle (caused by the consequences of the Earth's axial tilt), although wind magnitudes additionally have strong spatial components. Consequently, primary production in temperate regions such as the North Atlantic is highly seasonal, varying with both incident light at the water's surface (reduced in winter) and the degree of mixing (increased in winter). In tropical regions, such as the gyres in the middle of the major basins, light may only vary slightly across the year, and mixing may only occur episodically, such as during large storms or hurricanes.

Nutrients

 
Annual mean sea surface nitrate for the World Ocean. Data from the World Ocean Atlas 2009.

Mixing also plays an important role in the limitation of primary production by nutrients. Inorganic nutrients, such as nitrate, phosphate and silicic acid are necessary for phytoplankton to synthesise their cells and cellular machinery. Because of gravitational sinking of particulate material (such as plankton, dead or fecal material), nutrients are constantly lost from the photic zone, and are only replenished by mixing or upwelling of deeper water. This is exacerbated where summertime solar heating and reduced winds increases vertical stratification and leads to a strong thermocline, since this makes it more difficult for wind mixing to entrain deeper water. Consequently, between mixing events, primary production (and the resulting processes that leads to sinking particulate material) constantly acts to consume nutrients in the mixed layer, and in many regions this leads to nutrient exhaustion and decreased mixed layer production in the summer (even in the presence of abundant light). However, as long as the photic zone is deep enough, primary production may continue below the mixed layer where light-limited growth rates mean that nutrients are often more abundant.

Iron

Another factor relatively recently discovered to play a significant role in oceanic primary production is the micronutrient iron.[7] This is used as a cofactor in enzymes involved in processes such as nitrate reduction and nitrogen fixation. A major source of iron to the oceans is dust from the Earth's deserts, picked up and delivered by the wind as aeolian dust.

In regions of the ocean that are distant from deserts or that are not reached by dust-carrying winds (for example, the Southern and North Pacific oceans), the lack of iron can severely limit the amount of primary production that can occur. These areas are sometimes known as HNLC (High-Nutrient, Low-Chlorophyll) regions, because the scarcity of iron both limits phytoplankton growth and leaves a surplus of other nutrients. Some scientists have suggested introducing iron to these areas as a means of increasing primary productivity and sequestering carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.[8]

Measurement

The methods for measurement of primary production vary depending on whether gross vs net production is the desired measure, and whether terrestrial or aquatic systems are the focus. Gross production is almost always harder to measure than net, because of respiration, which is a continuous and ongoing process that consumes some of the products of primary production (i.e. sugars) before they can be accurately measured. Also, terrestrial ecosystems are generally more difficult because a substantial proportion of total productivity is shunted to below-ground organs and tissues, where it is logistically difficult to measure. Shallow water aquatic systems can also face this problem.

Scale also greatly affects measurement techniques. The rate of carbon assimilation in plant tissues, organs, whole plants, or plankton samples can be quantified by biochemically based techniques, but these techniques are decidedly inappropriate for large scale terrestrial field situations. There, net primary production is almost always the desired variable, and estimation techniques involve various methods of estimating dry-weight biomass changes over time. Biomass estimates are often converted to an energy measure, such as kilocalories, by an empirically determined conversion factor.

Terrestrial

 
An oak tree; a typical modern, terrestrial autotroph

In terrestrial ecosystems, researchers generally measure net primary production (NPP). Although its definition is straightforward, field measurements used to estimate productivity vary according to investigator and biome. Field estimates rarely account for below ground productivity, herbivory, turnover, litterfall, volatile organic compounds, root exudates, and allocation to symbiotic microorganisms. Biomass based NPP estimates result in underestimation of NPP due to incomplete accounting of these components.[9][10] However, many field measurements correlate well to NPP. There are a number of comprehensive reviews of the field methods used to estimate NPP.[9][10][11] Estimates of ecosystem respiration, the total carbon dioxide produced by the ecosystem, can also be made with gas flux measurements.

The major unaccounted pool is belowground productivity, especially production and turnover of roots. Belowground components of NPP are difficult to measure. BNPP (below-ground NPP) is often estimated based on a ratio of ANPP:BNPP (above-ground NPP:below-ground NPP) rather than direct measurements.

Gross primary production can be estimated from measurements of net ecosystem exchange (NEE) of carbon dioxide made by the eddy covariance technique. During night, this technique measures all components of ecosystem respiration. This respiration is scaled to day-time values and further subtracted from NEE.[12]

Grasslands

 
The Konza tallgrass prairie in the Flint Hills of northeastern Kansas

Most frequently, peak standing biomass is assumed to measure NPP. In systems with persistent standing litter, live biomass is commonly reported. Measures of peak biomass are more reliable if the system is predominantly annuals. However, perennial measurements could be reliable if there were a synchronous phenology driven by a strong seasonal climate. These methods may underestimate ANPP in grasslands by as much as 2 (temperate) to 4 (tropical) fold.[10] Repeated measures of standing live and dead biomass provide more accurate estimates of all grasslands, particularly those with large turnover, rapid decomposition, and interspecific variation in timing of peak biomass. Wetland productivity (marshes and fens) is similarly measured. In Europe, annual mowing makes the annual biomass increment of wetlands evident.

Forests

Methods used to measure forest productivity are more diverse than those of grasslands. Biomass increment based on stand specific allometry plus litterfall is considered a suitable although incomplete accounting of above-ground net primary production (ANPP).[9] Field measurements used as a proxy for ANPP include annual litterfall, diameter or basal area increment (DBH or BAI), and volume increment.

Aquatic

In aquatic systems, primary production is typically measured using one of six main techniques:[13]

  1. variations in oxygen concentration within a sealed bottle (developed by Gaarder and Gran in 1927)
  2. incorporation of inorganic carbon-14 (14C in the form of sodium bicarbonate) into organic matter[14][15]
  3. Stable isotopes of Oxygen (16O, 18O and 17O)[16][17]
  4. fluorescence kinetics (technique still a research topic)
  5. Stable isotopes of Carbon (12C and 13C)[18]
  6. Oxygen/Argon Ratios[19]

The technique developed by Gaarder and Gran uses variations in the concentration of oxygen under different experimental conditions to infer gross primary production. Typically, three identical transparent vessels are filled with sample water and stoppered. The first is analysed immediately and used to determine the initial oxygen concentration; usually this is done by performing a Winkler titration. The other two vessels are incubated, one each in under light and darkened. After a fixed period of time, the experiment ends, and the oxygen concentration in both vessels is measured. As photosynthesis has not taken place in the dark vessel, it provides a measure of ecosystem respiration. The light vessel permits both photosynthesis and respiration, so provides a measure of net photosynthesis (i.e. oxygen production via photosynthesis subtract oxygen consumption by respiration). Gross primary production is then obtained by adding oxygen consumption in the dark vessel to net oxygen production in the light vessel.

The technique of using 14C incorporation (added as labelled Na2CO3) to infer primary production is most commonly used today because it is sensitive, and can be used in all ocean environments. As 14C is radioactive (via beta decay), it is relatively straightforward to measure its incorporation in organic material using devices such as scintillation counters.

Depending upon the incubation time chosen, net or gross primary production can be estimated. Gross primary production is best estimated using relatively short incubation times (1 hour or less), since the loss of incorporated 14C (by respiration and organic material excretion / exudation) will be more limited. Net primary production is the fraction of gross production remaining after these loss processes have consumed some of the fixed carbon.

Loss processes can range between 10 and 60% of incorporated 14C according to the incubation period, ambient environmental conditions (especially temperature) and the experimental species used. Aside from those caused by the physiology of the experimental subject itself, potential losses due to the activity of consumers also need to be considered. This is particularly true in experiments making use of natural assemblages of microscopic autotrophs, where it is not possible to isolate them from their consumers.

The methods based on stable isotopes and O2/Ar ratios have the advantage of providing estimates of respiration rates in the light without the need of incubations in the dark. Among them, the method of the triple oxygen isotopes and O2/Ar have the additional advantage of not needing incubations in closed containers and O2/Ar can even be measured continuously at sea using equilibrator inlet mass spectrometry (EIMS)[20] or a membrane inlet mass spectrometry (MIMS).[21] However, if results relevant to the carbon cycle are desired, it is probably better to rely on methods based on carbon (and not oxygen) isotopes. It is important to notice that the method based on carbon stable isotopes is not simply an adaptation of the classic 14C method, but an entirely different approach that does not suffer from the problem of lack of account of carbon recycling during photosynthesis.

Global

As primary production in the biosphere is an important part of the carbon cycle, estimating it at the global scale is important in Earth system science. However, quantifying primary production at this scale is difficult because of the range of habitats on Earth, and because of the impact of weather events (availability of sunlight, water) on its variability. Using satellite-derived estimates of the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI) for terrestrial habitats and sea-surface chlorophyll for the oceans, it is estimated that the total (photoautotrophic) primary production for the Earth was 104.9 petagrams of carbon per year (Pg C yr−1; equivalent to the non-SI Gt C yr−1).[22] Of this, 56.4 Pg C yr−1 (53.8%), was the product of terrestrial organisms, while the remaining 48.5 Pg C yr−1, was accounted for by oceanic production.

Scaling ecosystem-level GPP estimations based on eddy covariance measurements of net ecosystem exchange (see above) to regional and global values using spatial details of different predictor variables, such as climate variables and remotely sensed fAPAR or LAI led to a terrestrial gross primary production of 123±8 Gt carbon (NOT carbon dioxide) per year during 1998-2005 [23]

In areal terms, it was estimated that land production was approximately 426 g C m−2 yr−1 (excluding areas with permanent ice cover), while that for the oceans was 140 g C m−2 yr−1.[22] Another significant difference between the land and the oceans lies in their standing stocks - while accounting for almost half of total production, oceanic autotrophs only account for about 0.2% of the total biomass.

Estimates

Primary productivity can be estimated by a variety of proxies. One that has particular relevance to the geological record is Barium, whose concentration in marine sediments rises in line with primary productivity at the surface.[24][25][26]

Human impact and appropriation

Human societies are part of the Earth's NPP cycle, but exert a disproportionate influence in it.[27] In 1996, Josep Garí designed a new indicator of sustainable development based precisely on the estimation of the human appropriation of NPP: he coined it "HANPP" (Human Appropriation of Net Primary Production) and introduced it at the inaugural conference of the European Society for Ecological Economics.[28] HANPP has since been further developed and widely applied in research on ecological economics as well as in policy analysis for sustainability. HANPP represents a proxy of the human impact on Nature and can be applied to different geographical scales and also globally.

The extensive degree of human use of the Planet's resources, mostly via land use, results in various levels of impact on actual NPP (NPPact). Although in some regions, such as the Nile valley, irrigation has resulted in a considerable increase in primary production, in most of the Planet there is a notable trend of NPP reduction due to land changes (ΔNPPLC) of 9.6% across global land-mass.[29] In addition to this, end consumption by people raises the total HANPP [27] to 23.8% of potential vegetation (NPP0).[29] It is estimated that, in 2000, 34% of the Earth's ice-free land area (12% cropland; 22% pasture) was devoted to human agriculture.[30] This disproportionate amount reduces the energy available to other species, having a marked impact on biodiversity, flows of carbon, water and energy, and ecosystem services,[29] and scientists have questioned how large this fraction can be before these services begin to break down.[31] Reductions in NPP are also expected in the ocean as a result of ongoing climate change, potentially impacting marine ecosystems (~10% of global biodiversity) and goods and services (1-5% of global total) that the oceans provide.[6]

See also

References

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  31. ^ Foley, J.A.; Monfreda, C.; Ramankutty, N.; Zaks, D. (2007). "Our share of the planetary pie". Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 104 (31): 12585–12586. Bibcode:2007PNAS..10412585F. doi:10.1073/pnas.0705190104. PMC 1937509. PMID 17646656.

primary, production, other, uses, economics, ecology, primary, production, synthesis, organic, compounds, from, atmospheric, aqueous, carbon, dioxide, principally, occurs, through, process, photosynthesis, which, uses, light, source, energy, also, occurs, thro. For other uses see Primary production economics In ecology primary production is the synthesis of organic compounds from atmospheric or aqueous carbon dioxide It principally occurs through the process of photosynthesis which uses light as its source of energy but it also occurs through chemosynthesis which uses the oxidation or reduction of inorganic chemical compounds as its source of energy Almost all life on Earth relies directly or indirectly on primary production The organisms responsible for primary production are known as primary producers or autotrophs and form the base of the food chain In terrestrial ecoregions these are mainly plants while in aquatic ecoregions algae predominate in this role Ecologists distinguish primary production as either net or gross the former accounting for losses to processes such as cellular respiration the latter not Global oceanic and terrestrial photoautotroph abundance from September 1997 to August 2000 As an estimate of autotroph biomass it is only a rough indicator of primary production potential and not an actual estimate of it Provided by the SeaWiFS Project NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and GeoEye Contents 1 Overview 2 Gross primary production and net primary production 3 Terrestrial production 4 Oceanic production 4 1 Light 4 2 Nutrients 4 3 Iron 5 Measurement 5 1 Terrestrial 5 1 1 Grasslands 5 1 2 Forests 5 2 Aquatic 5 3 Global 5 4 Estimates 6 Human impact and appropriation 7 See also 8 ReferencesOverview Edit The Calvin cycle of photosynthesis Primary production is the production of chemical energy in organic compounds by living organisms The main source of this energy is sunlight but a minute fraction of primary production is driven by lithotrophic organisms using the chemical energy of inorganic molecules Regardless of its source this energy is used to synthesize complex organic molecules from simpler inorganic compounds such as carbon dioxide CO2 and water H2O The following two equations are simplified representations of photosynthesis top and one form of chemosynthesis bottom CO2 H2O light CH2O O2 CO2 O2 4 H2S CH2O 4 S 3 H2O dd dd In both cases the end point is a polymer of reduced carbohydrate CH2O n typically molecules such as glucose or other sugars These relatively simple molecules may be then used to further synthesise more complicated molecules including proteins complex carbohydrates lipids and nucleic acids or be respired to perform work Consumption of primary producers by heterotrophic organisms such as animals then transfers these organic molecules and the energy stored within them up the food web fueling all of the Earth s living systems Gross primary production and net primary production EditGross primary production GPP is the amount of chemical energy typically expressed as carbon biomass that primary producers create in a given length of time Some fraction of this fixed energy is used by primary producers for cellular respiration and maintenance of existing tissues i e growth respiration and maintenance respiration 1 2 The remaining fixed energy i e mass of photosynthate is referred to as net primary production NPP NPP GPP respiration by plants dd dd Net primary production is the rate at which all the autotrophs in an ecosystem produce net useful chemical energy Net primary production is available to be directed toward growth and reproduction of primary producers As such it is available for consumption by herbivores Both gross and net primary production are typically expressed in units of mass per unit area per unit time interval In terrestrial ecosystems mass of carbon per unit area per year g C m 2 yr 1 is most often used as the unit of measurement Note that a distinction is sometimes drawn between production and productivity with the former the quantity of material produced g C m 2 the latter the rate at which it is produced g C m 2 yr 1 but these terms are more typically used interchangeably Terrestrial production Edit source source source source source source This animation shows Earth s monthly terrestrial net primary productivity from 2000 to 2013 Values range from near 0 grams of carbon per square meter per day tan to 6 5 grams per square meter per day dark green A negative value means decomposition or respiration overpowered carbon absorption more carbon was released to the atmosphere than the plants took in In mid latitudes productivity obviously interacts with seasonal change with productivity peaking in each hemisphere s summer The data come from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer MODIS on NASA s Terra satellite 3 See also Terrestrial biological carbon cycle On the land almost all primary production is now performed by vascular plants with a small fraction coming from algae and non vascular plants such as mosses and liverworts Before the evolution of vascular plants non vascular plants likely played a more significant role Primary production on land is a function of many factors but principally local hydrology and temperature the latter covaries to an extent with light specifically photosynthetically active radiation PAR the source of energy for photosynthesis While plants cover much of the Earth s surface they are strongly curtailed wherever temperatures are too extreme or where necessary plant resources principally water and PAR are limiting such as deserts or polar regions Water is consumed in plants by the processes of photosynthesis see above and transpiration The latter process which is responsible for about 90 of water use is driven by the evaporation of water from the leaves of plants Transpiration allows plants to transport water and mineral nutrients from the soil to growth regions and also cools the plant Diffusion of water vapour out of a leaf the force that drives transpiration is regulated by structures known as stomata These structures also regulate the diffusion of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere into the leaf such that decreasing water loss by partially closing stomata also decreases carbon dioxide gain Certain plants use alternative forms of photosynthesis called Crassulacean acid metabolism CAM and C4 These employ physiological and anatomical adaptations to increase water use efficiency and allow increased primary production to take place under conditions that would normally limit carbon fixation by C3 plants the majority of plant species As shown in the animation the boreal forests of Canada and Russia experience high productivity in June and July and then a slow decline through fall and winter Year round tropical forests in South America Africa Southeast Asia and Indonesia have high productivity not surprising with the abundant sunlight warmth and rainfall However even in the tropics there are variations in productivity over the course of the year For example the Amazon basin exhibits especially high productivity from roughly August through October the period of the area s dry season Because the trees have access to a plentiful supply of ground water that builds up in the rainy season they grow better when the rainy skies clear and allow more sunlight to reach the forest 3 Oceanic production Edit Marine diatoms an example of planktonic microalgae Main article Marine primary production In a reversal of the pattern on land in the oceans almost all photosynthesis is performed by algae with a small fraction contributed by vascular plants and other groups Algae encompass a diverse range of organisms ranging from single floating cells to attached seaweeds They include photoautotrophs from a variety of groups Eubacteria are important photosynthetizers in both oceanic and terrestrial ecosystems and while some archaea are phototrophic none are known to utilise oxygen evolving photosynthesis 4 A number of eukaryotes are significant contributors to primary production in the ocean including green algae brown algae and red algae and a diverse group of unicellular groups Vascular plants are also represented in the ocean by groups such as the seagrasses Unlike terrestrial ecosystems the majority of primary production in the ocean is performed by free living microscopic organisms called phytoplankton Larger autotrophs such as the seagrasses and macroalgae seaweeds are generally confined to the littoral zone and adjacent shallow waters where they can attach to the underlying substrate but still be within the photic zone There are exceptions such as Sargassum but the vast majority of free floating production takes place within microscopic organisms Differences in relative photosynthesis between plankton species under different irradiance The factors limiting primary production in the ocean are also very different from those on land The availability of water obviously is not an issue though its salinity can be Similarly temperature while affecting metabolic rates see Q10 ranges less widely in the ocean than on land because the heat capacity of seawater buffers temperature changes and the formation of sea ice insulates it at lower temperatures However the availability of light the source of energy for photosynthesis and mineral nutrients the building blocks for new growth play crucial roles in regulating primary production in the ocean 5 Available Earth System Models suggest that ongoing ocean bio geochemical changes could trigger reductions in ocean NPP between 3 and 10 of current values depending on the emissions scenario 6 Light Edit A kelp forest an example of attached macroalgae The sunlit zone of the ocean is called the photic zone or euphotic zone This is a relatively thin layer 10 100 m near the ocean s surface where there is sufficient light for photosynthesis to occur For practical purposes the thickness of the photic zone is typically defined by the depth at which light reaches 1 of its surface value Light is attenuated down the water column by its absorption or scattering by the water itself and by dissolved or particulate material within it including phytoplankton Net photosynthesis in the water column is determined by the interaction between the photic zone and the mixed layer Turbulent mixing by wind energy at the ocean s surface homogenises the water column vertically until the turbulence dissipates creating the aforementioned mixed layer The deeper the mixed layer the lower the average amount of light intercepted by phytoplankton within it The mixed layer can vary from being shallower than the photic zone to being much deeper than the photic zone When it is much deeper than the photic zone this results in phytoplankton spending too much time in the dark for net growth to occur The maximum depth of the mixed layer in which net growth can occur is called the critical depth As long as there are adequate nutrients available net primary production occurs whenever the mixed layer is shallower than the critical depth Both the magnitude of wind mixing and the availability of light at the ocean s surface are affected across a range of space and time scales The most characteristic of these is the seasonal cycle caused by the consequences of the Earth s axial tilt although wind magnitudes additionally have strong spatial components Consequently primary production in temperate regions such as the North Atlantic is highly seasonal varying with both incident light at the water s surface reduced in winter and the degree of mixing increased in winter In tropical regions such as the gyres in the middle of the major basins light may only vary slightly across the year and mixing may only occur episodically such as during large storms or hurricanes Nutrients Edit Annual mean sea surface nitrate for the World Ocean Data from the World Ocean Atlas 2009 Mixing also plays an important role in the limitation of primary production by nutrients Inorganic nutrients such as nitrate phosphate and silicic acid are necessary for phytoplankton to synthesise their cells and cellular machinery Because of gravitational sinking of particulate material such as plankton dead or fecal material nutrients are constantly lost from the photic zone and are only replenished by mixing or upwelling of deeper water This is exacerbated where summertime solar heating and reduced winds increases vertical stratification and leads to a strong thermocline since this makes it more difficult for wind mixing to entrain deeper water Consequently between mixing events primary production and the resulting processes that leads to sinking particulate material constantly acts to consume nutrients in the mixed layer and in many regions this leads to nutrient exhaustion and decreased mixed layer production in the summer even in the presence of abundant light However as long as the photic zone is deep enough primary production may continue below the mixed layer where light limited growth rates mean that nutrients are often more abundant Iron Edit Another factor relatively recently discovered to play a significant role in oceanic primary production is the micronutrient iron 7 This is used as a cofactor in enzymes involved in processes such as nitrate reduction and nitrogen fixation A major source of iron to the oceans is dust from the Earth s deserts picked up and delivered by the wind as aeolian dust In regions of the ocean that are distant from deserts or that are not reached by dust carrying winds for example the Southern and North Pacific oceans the lack of iron can severely limit the amount of primary production that can occur These areas are sometimes known as HNLC High Nutrient Low Chlorophyll regions because the scarcity of iron both limits phytoplankton growth and leaves a surplus of other nutrients Some scientists have suggested introducing iron to these areas as a means of increasing primary productivity and sequestering carbon dioxide from the atmosphere 8 Measurement EditThe methods for measurement of primary production vary depending on whether gross vs net production is the desired measure and whether terrestrial or aquatic systems are the focus Gross production is almost always harder to measure than net because of respiration which is a continuous and ongoing process that consumes some of the products of primary production i e sugars before they can be accurately measured Also terrestrial ecosystems are generally more difficult because a substantial proportion of total productivity is shunted to below ground organs and tissues where it is logistically difficult to measure Shallow water aquatic systems can also face this problem Scale also greatly affects measurement techniques The rate of carbon assimilation in plant tissues organs whole plants or plankton samples can be quantified by biochemically based techniques but these techniques are decidedly inappropriate for large scale terrestrial field situations There net primary production is almost always the desired variable and estimation techniques involve various methods of estimating dry weight biomass changes over time Biomass estimates are often converted to an energy measure such as kilocalories by an empirically determined conversion factor Terrestrial Edit An oak tree a typical modern terrestrial autotroph In terrestrial ecosystems researchers generally measure net primary production NPP Although its definition is straightforward field measurements used to estimate productivity vary according to investigator and biome Field estimates rarely account for below ground productivity herbivory turnover litterfall volatile organic compounds root exudates and allocation to symbiotic microorganisms Biomass based NPP estimates result in underestimation of NPP due to incomplete accounting of these components 9 10 However many field measurements correlate well to NPP There are a number of comprehensive reviews of the field methods used to estimate NPP 9 10 11 Estimates of ecosystem respiration the total carbon dioxide produced by the ecosystem can also be made with gas flux measurements The major unaccounted pool is belowground productivity especially production and turnover of roots Belowground components of NPP are difficult to measure BNPP below ground NPP is often estimated based on a ratio of ANPP BNPP above ground NPP below ground NPP rather than direct measurements Gross primary production can be estimated from measurements of net ecosystem exchange NEE of carbon dioxide made by the eddy covariance technique During night this technique measures all components of ecosystem respiration This respiration is scaled to day time values and further subtracted from NEE 12 Grasslands Edit The Konza tallgrass prairie in the Flint Hills of northeastern Kansas Most frequently peak standing biomass is assumed to measure NPP In systems with persistent standing litter live biomass is commonly reported Measures of peak biomass are more reliable if the system is predominantly annuals However perennial measurements could be reliable if there were a synchronous phenology driven by a strong seasonal climate These methods may underestimate ANPP in grasslands by as much as 2 temperate to 4 tropical fold 10 Repeated measures of standing live and dead biomass provide more accurate estimates of all grasslands particularly those with large turnover rapid decomposition and interspecific variation in timing of peak biomass Wetland productivity marshes and fens is similarly measured In Europe annual mowing makes the annual biomass increment of wetlands evident Forests Edit Methods used to measure forest productivity are more diverse than those of grasslands Biomass increment based on stand specific allometry plus litterfall is considered a suitable although incomplete accounting of above ground net primary production ANPP 9 Field measurements used as a proxy for ANPP include annual litterfall diameter or basal area increment DBH or BAI and volume increment Aquatic Edit In aquatic systems primary production is typically measured using one of six main techniques 13 variations in oxygen concentration within a sealed bottle developed by Gaarder and Gran in 1927 incorporation of inorganic carbon 14 14C in the form of sodium bicarbonate into organic matter 14 15 Stable isotopes of Oxygen 16O 18O and 17O 16 17 fluorescence kinetics technique still a research topic Stable isotopes of Carbon 12C and 13C 18 Oxygen Argon Ratios 19 The technique developed by Gaarder and Gran uses variations in the concentration of oxygen under different experimental conditions to infer gross primary production Typically three identical transparent vessels are filled with sample water and stoppered The first is analysed immediately and used to determine the initial oxygen concentration usually this is done by performing a Winkler titration The other two vessels are incubated one each in under light and darkened After a fixed period of time the experiment ends and the oxygen concentration in both vessels is measured As photosynthesis has not taken place in the dark vessel it provides a measure of ecosystem respiration The light vessel permits both photosynthesis and respiration so provides a measure of net photosynthesis i e oxygen production via photosynthesis subtract oxygen consumption by respiration Gross primary production is then obtained by adding oxygen consumption in the dark vessel to net oxygen production in the light vessel The technique of using 14C incorporation added as labelled Na2CO3 to infer primary production is most commonly used today because it is sensitive and can be used in all ocean environments As 14C is radioactive via beta decay it is relatively straightforward to measure its incorporation in organic material using devices such as scintillation counters Depending upon the incubation time chosen net or gross primary production can be estimated Gross primary production is best estimated using relatively short incubation times 1 hour or less since the loss of incorporated 14C by respiration and organic material excretion exudation will be more limited Net primary production is the fraction of gross production remaining after these loss processes have consumed some of the fixed carbon Loss processes can range between 10 and 60 of incorporated 14C according to the incubation period ambient environmental conditions especially temperature and the experimental species used Aside from those caused by the physiology of the experimental subject itself potential losses due to the activity of consumers also need to be considered This is particularly true in experiments making use of natural assemblages of microscopic autotrophs where it is not possible to isolate them from their consumers The methods based on stable isotopes and O2 Ar ratios have the advantage of providing estimates of respiration rates in the light without the need of incubations in the dark Among them the method of the triple oxygen isotopes and O2 Ar have the additional advantage of not needing incubations in closed containers and O2 Ar can even be measured continuously at sea using equilibrator inlet mass spectrometry EIMS 20 or a membrane inlet mass spectrometry MIMS 21 However if results relevant to the carbon cycle are desired it is probably better to rely on methods based on carbon and not oxygen isotopes It is important to notice that the method based on carbon stable isotopes is not simply an adaptation of the classic 14C method but an entirely different approach that does not suffer from the problem of lack of account of carbon recycling during photosynthesis Global Edit As primary production in the biosphere is an important part of the carbon cycle estimating it at the global scale is important in Earth system science However quantifying primary production at this scale is difficult because of the range of habitats on Earth and because of the impact of weather events availability of sunlight water on its variability Using satellite derived estimates of the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index NDVI for terrestrial habitats and sea surface chlorophyll for the oceans it is estimated that the total photoautotrophic primary production for the Earth was 104 9 petagrams of carbon per year Pg C yr 1 equivalent to the non SI Gt C yr 1 22 Of this 56 4 Pg C yr 1 53 8 was the product of terrestrial organisms while the remaining 48 5 Pg C yr 1 was accounted for by oceanic production Scaling ecosystem level GPP estimations based on eddy covariance measurements of net ecosystem exchange see above to regional and global values using spatial details of different predictor variables such as climate variables and remotely sensed fAPAR or LAI led to a terrestrial gross primary production of 123 8 Gt carbon NOT carbon dioxide per year during 1998 2005 23 In areal terms it was estimated that land production was approximately 426 g C m 2 yr 1 excluding areas with permanent ice cover while that for the oceans was 140 g C m 2 yr 1 22 Another significant difference between the land and the oceans lies in their standing stocks while accounting for almost half of total production oceanic autotrophs only account for about 0 2 of the total biomass Estimates Edit Primary productivity can be estimated by a variety of proxies One that has particular relevance to the geological record is Barium whose concentration in marine sediments rises in line with primary productivity at the surface 24 25 26 Human impact and appropriation EditHuman societies are part of the Earth s NPP cycle but exert a disproportionate influence in it 27 In 1996 Josep Gari designed a new indicator of sustainable development based precisely on the estimation of the human appropriation of NPP he coined it HANPP Human Appropriation of Net Primary Production and introduced it at the inaugural conference of the European Society for Ecological Economics 28 HANPP has since been further developed and widely applied in research on ecological economics as well as in policy analysis for sustainability HANPP represents a proxy of the human impact on Nature and can be applied to different geographical scales and also globally The extensive degree of human use of the Planet s resources mostly via land use results in various levels of impact on actual NPP NPPact Although in some regions such as the Nile valley irrigation has resulted in a considerable increase in primary production in most of the Planet there is a notable trend of NPP reduction due to land changes DNPPLC of 9 6 across global land mass 29 In addition to this end consumption by people raises the total HANPP 27 to 23 8 of potential vegetation NPP0 29 It is estimated that in 2000 34 of the Earth s ice free land area 12 cropland 22 pasture was devoted to human agriculture 30 This disproportionate amount reduces the energy available to other species having a marked impact on biodiversity flows of carbon water and energy and ecosystem services 29 and scientists have questioned how large this fraction can be before these services begin to break down 31 Reductions in NPP are also expected in the ocean as a result of ongoing climate change potentially impacting marine ecosystems 10 of global biodiversity and goods and services 1 5 of global total that the oceans provide 6 See also EditBiological pump Biomass ecology f ratio Productivity Hydrogen sulfide H2S Lists of organisms by populationReferences Edit Amthor J S and Baldocchi D D 2001 Terrestrial Higher Plant Respiration and Net Primary Production In Terrestrial Global Productivity Academic Press 33 59 Sigman D M Hain M P 2012 The Biological Productivity of the Ocean PDF Nature Education Knowledge 3 6 1 16 Retrieved 2015 06 01 Gross primary production GPP refers to the total rate of organic carbon production by autotrophs while respiration refers to the energy yielding oxidation of organic carbon back to carbon dioxide Net primary production NPP is GPP minus the autotrophs own rate of respiration it is thus the rate at which the full metabolism of phytoplankton produces biomass Secondary production SP typically refers to the growth rate of heterotrophic biomass a b Net Primary Productivity Global Maps earthobservatory nasa gov 26 March 2018 Retrieved 26 March 2018 Schafer G Engelhard M Muller V 1 September 1999 Bioenergetics of the Archaea Microbiol Mol Biol Rev 63 3 570 620 doi 10 1128 MMBR 63 3 570 620 1999 PMC 103747 PMID 10477309 Sigman D M Hain M P 2012 The Biological Productivity of the Ocean PDF Nature Education Knowledge 3 6 1 16 Retrieved 2015 06 01 The deep chlorophyll maximum DCM occurs at the contact where there is adequate light for photosynthesis and yet significant nutrient supply from below a b Mora C et al 2013 Biotic and Human Vulnerability to Projected Changes in Ocean Biogeochemistry over the 21st Century PLOS Biology 11 10 e1001682 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 1001682 PMC 3797030 PMID 24143135 Martin J H Fitzwater S E 1988 Iron deficiency limits phytoplankton growth in the Northeast Pacific Subarctic Nature 331 6154 341 343 Bibcode 1988Natur 331 341M doi 10 1038 331341a0 S2CID 4325562 Cooper D J Watson A 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Paleoceanography 7 2 163 181 Bibcode 1992PalOc 7 163D doi 10 1029 92PA00181 S2CID 130057872 a b Vitousek P M Ehrlich P R Ehrlich A H Matson P A 1986 Human appropriation of the products of photosynthesis PDF BioScience 36 6 368 373 doi 10 2307 1310258 JSTOR 1310258 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 03 05 Gari J A 1996 HANPP calculated from land cover as indicator of ecological sustainability Proceedings of the International Conference Ecology Society Economy 1 18 hdl 10419 183215 a b c Haberl H Erb K H Krausmann F Gaube V Bondeau A Plutzar C Gingrich S Lucht W Fischer Kowalski M 2007 Quantifying and mapping the human appropriation of net primary production in earth s terrestrial ecosystems Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104 31 12942 12947 Bibcode 2007PNAS 10412942H doi 10 1073 pnas 0704243104 PMC 1911196 PMID 17616580 Ramankutty N Evan A T Monfreda C Foley J A 2008 Farming the planet 1 Geographic distribution of global agricultural lands in the year 2000 Global Biogeochemical Cycles 22 1 GB1003 Bibcode 2008GBioC 22 1003R doi 10 1029 2007GB002952 S2CID 128460031 Foley J A Monfreda C Ramankutty N Zaks D 2007 Our share of the planetary pie Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 104 31 12585 12586 Bibcode 2007PNAS 10412585F doi 10 1073 pnas 0705190104 PMC 1937509 PMID 17646656 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Primary production amp oldid 1132691146, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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