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Hydroclimatic extremes contribute to asymmetric trends in ecosystem productivity loss

Li, Jun; Bevacqua, Emanuele; Wang, Zhaoli; Sitch, Stephen; Arora, Vivek; Arneth, Almut 1; Jain, Atul K.; Goll, Daniel; Tian, Hanqin; Zscheischler, Jakob
1 Institut für Meteorologie und Klimaforschung (IMK), Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (KIT)

Abstract:

Gross primary production is the basis of global carbon uptake. Gross primary production losses are often related to hydroclimatic extremes such as droughts and heatwaves, but the trend of such losses driven by hydroclimatic extremes remains unclear. Using observationally-constrained and process-based model data from 1982-2016, we show that drought-heat events, drought-cold events, droughts and heatwaves are the dominant drivers of gross primary production loss. Losses associated with these drivers increase in northern midlatitude ecosystem but decrease in pantropical ecosystems, thereby contributing to around 70% of the variability in total gross primary production losses. These asymmetric trends are caused by an increase in the magnitude of gross primary production losses in northern midlatitudes and by a decrease in the frequency of gross primary production loss events in pantropical ecosystems. Our results suggest that the pantropics may have become less vulnerable to hydroclimatic variability over recent decades whereas gross primary production losses and hydroclimatic extremes in northern midlatitudes have become more closely entangled.


Verlagsausgabe §
DOI: 10.5445/IR/1000160193
Veröffentlicht am 05.07.2023
Originalveröffentlichung
DOI: 10.1038/s43247-023-00869-4
Scopus
Zitationen: 9
Web of Science
Zitationen: 6
Dimensions
Zitationen: 9
Cover der Publikation
Zugehörige Institution(en) am KIT Institut für Meteorologie und Klimaforschung – Atmosphärische Umweltforschung (IMK-IFU)
Publikationstyp Zeitschriftenaufsatz
Publikationsjahr 2023
Sprache Englisch
Identifikator ISSN: 2662-4435
KITopen-ID: 1000160193
HGF-Programm 12.11.21 (POF IV, LK 01) Natural ecosystems as sources and sinks of GHGs
Erschienen in Communications Earth & Environment
Verlag Springer Nature
Band 4
Heft 1
Seiten Art.Nr. 197
Vorab online veröffentlicht am 02.06.2023
Nachgewiesen in Scopus
Web of Science
Dimensions
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