4.5 Article

Variations of net ecosystem production due to seasonal precipitation differences in a tropical dry forest of northwest Mexico

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-BIOGEOSCIENCES
Volume 120, Issue 10, Pages 2081-2094

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2015JG003119

Keywords

net ecosystem exchange; North American monsoon; ecosystem respiration; ecohydrology; tropical deciduous forest; MexFlux

Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACYT) in Mexico [231560, CB-2013-01: 221014]

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Due to their large extent and high primary productivity, tropical dry forests (TDF) are important contributors to atmospheric carbon exchanges in subtropical and tropical regions. In northwest Mexico, a bimodal precipitation regime that includes winter precipitation derived from Pacific storms and summer precipitation from the North American monsoon (NAM) couples water availability with ecosystem processes. We investigated the net ecosystem production of a TDF ecosystem using a 4.5year record of water and carbon fluxes obtained from the eddy covariance method complemented with remotely sensed data. We identified a large CO2 efflux at the start of the summer season that is strongly related to the preceding winter precipitation and greenness. Since this CO2 efflux occurs prior to vegetation green-up, we infer that respiration is mainly due to decomposition of soil organic matter accumulated from the prior growing season. Overall, ecosystem respiration has an important effect on the net ecosystem production but can be overwhelmed by the strength of the primary productivity during the NAM. Precipitation characteristics during NAM have significant controls on sustaining carbon fixation in the TDF into the fall season. We identified that a threshold of similar to 350 to 400mm of monsoon precipitation leads to a switch in the annual carbon balance in the TDF ecosystem from a net source (+102gC/m(2)/yr) to a net sink (-249gC/m(2)/yr). This monsoonal precipitation threshold is typically exceeded one out of every 2years. The close coupling of winter and summer periods with respect to carbon fluxes suggests that the annual carbon balance is dependent on precipitation amounts in both seasons in TDF ecosystems.

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