4.8 Article

Forests buffer against variations in precipitation

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 19, Pages 4686-4696

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15763

Keywords

atmospheric transport; evapotranspiration; forests; moisture recycling; precipitation variability

Funding

  1. Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek [016.veni.171.019]
  2. Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek --Graduate Program in Nature Conservation, Management and Restoration
  3. University Research Priority Program in Global Change and Biodiversity, University of Zurich

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This study has found that forests in 10 out of 14 biomes globally have a significant buffering effect on precipitation variability downwind, particularly reducing the coefficient of variation of monthly precipitation by 60% if 50% of precipitation originates from forests. Conversely, a high fraction of precipitation from non-forest land sources tends to increase precipitation variability. The results highlight the importance of land cover composition in the precipitationshed for buffering precipitation variability downwind.
Atmospheric moisture recycling effectively increases the amount of usable water over land as the water can undergo multiple precipitation-evapotranspiration cycles. Differences in land cover and climate regulate the evapotranspiration flux. Forests can have deep roots that access groundwater facilitating transpiration throughout the dry season independent of precipitation. This stable transpiration buffers the forest against precipitation variability. However, it is not known whether the buffering effect, already modeled for tropical forests, is common to all forests globally. Here we apply a state-of-the-art Lagrangian moisture tracking model (UTrack) to study whether forest land cover in the upwind precipitationshed can lead to a reduction in monthly precipitation variability downwind. We found a significant buffering effect of forests in the precipitation variability of 10 out of 14 biomes globally. On average, if 50% of precipitation originates from forest, then we find a reduction in the coefficient of variation of monthly precipitation of 60%. We also observed that a high fraction of precipitation from non-forest land sources tends to have the opposite effect, that is, no buffering effect. The average variation of monthly precipitation was 69% higher in areas where 50% of precipitation originates from non-forest land sources in the precipitationshed. Our results emphasize the importance of land cover composition in the precipitationshed to buffer precipitation variability downwind, in particular forest cover. Understanding the influence of land cover in a precipitationshed on atmospheric moisture transport is key for evaluating an area's water-climate regulatory ecosystem services and may become increasingly important due to continued changes in land cover and climate change.

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