4.8 Article

Increased water-use efficiency and reduced CO2 uptake by plants during droughts at a continental scale

Journal

NATURE GEOSCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages 744-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41561-018-0212-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. CarboEuropeIP
  2. FAO-GTOS-TCO
  3. iLEAPS
  4. Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry
  5. National Science Foundation
  6. University of Tuscia
  7. Universite Laval
  8. Environment Canada
  9. US Department of Energy
  10. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [NWO-VIDI 864.08.012]
  11. National Computing Facilities Foundation (NCF project) [SH-060]
  12. US Department of Energy's Office of Science, Terrestrial Ecosystem Science Program [DE-SC0010624]
  13. NASA CMS Project [NNX16AP33G]
  14. UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) of the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS)
  15. NERC project IMPETUS [NE/L010488/1]
  16. European Research Council's project ASICA [CoG 649087]
  17. NOAA Climate Program Office's Atmospheric Chemistry, Carbon Cycle, and Climate (AC4) program
  18. NERC [NE/L010488/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  19. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-SC0010624] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)

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Severe droughts in the Northern Hemisphere cause a widespread decline of agricultural yield, the reduction of forest carbon uptake, and increased CO2 growth rates in the atmosphere. Plants respond to droughts by partially closing their stomata to limit their evaporative water loss, at the expense of carbon uptake by photosynthesis. This trade-off maximizes their water-use efficiency (WUE), as measured for many individual plants under laboratory conditions and field experiments. Here we analyse the C-13/C-12 stable isotope ratio in atmospheric CO2 to provide new observational evidence of the impact of droughts on the WUE across areas of millions of square kilometres and spanning one decade of recent climate variability. We find strong and spatially coherent increases in WUE along with widespread reductions of net carbon uptake over the Northern Hemisphere during severe droughts that affected Europe, Russia and the United States in 2001-2011. The impact of those droughts on WUE and carbon uptake by vegetation is substantially larger than simulated by the land-surface schemes of six state-of-the-art climate models. This suggests that drought-induced carbon-climate feedbacks may be too small in these models and improvements to their vegetation dynamics using stable isotope observations can help to improve their drought response.

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