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Soil moisture dominates dryness stress on ecosystem production globally
by
Li, Shuangcheng
, Seneviratne, Sonia I.
, Hauser, Mathias
, Qin, Dahe
, Gudmundsson, Lukas
, Liu, Laibao
in
704/106/35/823
/ 704/158/2445
/ Aridity
/ Atmospheric models
/ Atmospheric water
/ Drought
/ Ecosystems
/ Environmental risk
/ Fluorescence
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Moisture effects
/ multidisciplinary
/ open climate campaign
/ Satellite observation
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Soil moisture
/ Soil stresses
/ Vapor pressure
/ Vegetation
/ Vegetation growth
/ Water demand
2020
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Soil moisture dominates dryness stress on ecosystem production globally
by
Li, Shuangcheng
, Seneviratne, Sonia I.
, Hauser, Mathias
, Qin, Dahe
, Gudmundsson, Lukas
, Liu, Laibao
in
704/106/35/823
/ 704/158/2445
/ Aridity
/ Atmospheric models
/ Atmospheric water
/ Drought
/ Ecosystems
/ Environmental risk
/ Fluorescence
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Moisture effects
/ multidisciplinary
/ open climate campaign
/ Satellite observation
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Soil moisture
/ Soil stresses
/ Vapor pressure
/ Vegetation
/ Vegetation growth
/ Water demand
2020
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Soil moisture dominates dryness stress on ecosystem production globally
by
Li, Shuangcheng
, Seneviratne, Sonia I.
, Hauser, Mathias
, Qin, Dahe
, Gudmundsson, Lukas
, Liu, Laibao
in
704/106/35/823
/ 704/158/2445
/ Aridity
/ Atmospheric models
/ Atmospheric water
/ Drought
/ Ecosystems
/ Environmental risk
/ Fluorescence
/ Humanities and Social Sciences
/ Moisture effects
/ multidisciplinary
/ open climate campaign
/ Satellite observation
/ Science
/ Science (multidisciplinary)
/ Soil moisture
/ Soil stresses
/ Vapor pressure
/ Vegetation
/ Vegetation growth
/ Water demand
2020
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Soil moisture dominates dryness stress on ecosystem production globally
Journal Article
Soil moisture dominates dryness stress on ecosystem production globally
2020
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Overview
Dryness stress can limit vegetation growth and is often characterized by low soil moisture (SM) and high atmospheric water demand (vapor pressure deficit, VPD). However, the relative role of SM and VPD in limiting ecosystem production remains debated and is difficult to disentangle, as SM and VPD are coupled through land-atmosphere interactions, hindering the ability to predict ecosystem responses to dryness. Here, we combine satellite observations of solar-induced fluorescence with estimates of SM and VPD and show that SM is the dominant driver of dryness stress on ecosystem production across more than 70% of vegetated land areas with valid data. Moreover, after accounting for SM-VPD coupling, VPD effects on ecosystem production are much smaller across large areas. We also find that SM stress is strongest in semi-arid ecosystems. Our results clarify a longstanding question and open new avenues for improving models to allow a better management of drought risk.
Dryness stresses vegetation and can lead to declines in productivity, increased emission of carbon, and plant mortality, but the drivers of this stress remain unclear. Here the authors show that soil moisture plays a dominant role relative to atmospheric water demand over most global land vegetated areas.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group,Nature Portfolio
Subject
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