Biological productivity
- Also called:
- boreal forest
Primary productivity (the rate at which photosynthesis occurs) of taiga ecosystems often is limited by cold soil temperatures (see above Soils). Net annual primary production (the total amount of productivity less that used by photosynthetic organisms in cellular respiration) in taiga ecosystems varies greatly, from slightly more than 2 metric tons per hectare near the polar tree limit to about 10 metric tons per hectare along its southern margin. The taiga biome is estimated to contain about 18 percent of Earth’s total biomass (the dry weight of organic matter). The taiga of Siberia alone represents 57 percent of Earth’s coniferous wood volume. Ecosystems and soils of the boreal region store a significant amount of Earth’s carbon in the form of dead but undecomposed or partially decomposed organic matter. Global warming or land use changes could enhance decomposition, leading to the release of increased amounts of stored carbon into the atmosphere in the form of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide. (For further discussion of biological productivity, see biosphere: The flow of energy.)
Glenn Patrick Juday