After years of technological development and its important achievements
to make our life easier and more comfortable, human society is going to
face one of the most difficult challenges of the last century: to
stabilize the concentra- tion levels of greenhouse gases in the
atmosphere to prevent harmful effects on the climate system. Through a
delicate balance between photosynthesis and respiration, terres- trial
ecosystems, and in particular forests, are today thought to take up a
sig- nificant part of the carbon dioxide emissions in the atmosphere,
sometimes called the "terrestrial carbon sink". However, the location,
magnitude, and vulnerability of the carbon dioxide sink of the
terrestrial biota are still uncer- tain. The suite of traditional tools
in an ecologist's toolbox for studying ecosys- tem productivity and
carbon balance include leaf cuvettes, whole-plant and soil chambers for
gas exchange, and biomass and soil carbon inventories. While each of the
cited methods has distinct advantages, they are limited with regards to
their ability to measure net carbon dioxide exchange of the whole
ecosystem across a variety of time scales. This book present a
compendium of results of a European project (EURO- FLUX), funded by the
European Commission through its fourth framework program, aiming to
elucidate the role of forests in continental carbon balance.