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Ecosystem resilience despite large-scale altered hydroclimatic conditions
Authors
A Dai
A Huete
+41 more
A Savitzky
AK Knapp
Alfredo Huete
Anthony R. Buda
B Walker
CD Allen
CW Thornthwaite
Cynthia Bresloff
David D. Bosch
DD Breshears
Debra P. C. Peters
Derek Eamus
Diane S. Montoya
E. John Sadler
GM MacDonald
Guillermo E. Ponce-Campos
HN Le Houérou
JA Morgan
Jack A. Morgan
JF Weltzin
L Zhang
M Jung
M. Susan Moran
Mark S. Seyfried
Mitchel P. McClaran
N Wells
P Jönsson
Patrick J. Starks
PCD Milly
RK Monson
RL Scott
SH Roxburgh
SR Saleska
Stacey A. Gunter
Stanley G. Kitchen
SW Running
Tamara Heartsill Scalley
TE Huxman
Travis E. Huxman
W. Henry McNab
Yongguang Zhang
Publication date
20 January 2013
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
Climate change is predicted to increase both drought frequency and duration, and when coupled with substantial warming, will establish a new hydroclimatological model for many regions. Large-scale, warm droughts have recently occurred in North America, Africa, Europe, Amazonia and Australia, resulting in major effects on terrestrial ecosystems, carbon balance and food security. Here we compare the functional response of above-ground net primary production to contrasting hydroclimatic periods in the late twentieth century (1975-1998), and drier, warmer conditions in the early twenty-first century (2000-2009) in the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. We find a common ecosystem water-use efficiency (WUE e: Above-ground net primary production/ evapotranspiration) across biomes ranging from grassland to forest that indicates an intrinsic system sensitivity to water availability across rainfall regimes, regardless of hydroclimatic conditions. We found higher WUE e in drier years that increased significantly with drought to a maximum WUE e across all biomes; and a minimum native state in wetter years that was common across hydroclimatic periods. This indicates biome-scale resilience to the interannual variability associated with the early twenty-first century drought - that is, the capacity to tolerate low, annual precipitation and to respond to subsequent periods of favourable water balance. These findings provide a conceptual model of ecosystem properties at the decadal scale applicable to the widespread altered hydroclimatic conditions that are predicted for later this century. Understanding the hydroclimatic threshold that will break down ecosystem resilience and alter maximum WUE e may allow us to predict land-surface consequences as large regions become more arid, starting with water-limited, low-productivity grasslands. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved
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OPUS - University of Technology Sydney
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Last time updated on 13/02/2017
Crossref
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info:doi/10.1038%2Fnature11836
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The University of Arizona
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oai:repository.arizona.edu:101...
Last time updated on 11/12/2021