4.7 Article

Photosynthetic and hydraulic traits influence forest resistance and resilience to drought stress across different biomes

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 828, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.154517

Keywords

Forest resistance to drought; Forest resilience to drought; Climatic condition; Photosynthetic rate; Hydraulic traits; Hydraulic efficiency

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31800329]
  2. Huitong Forest Ecological Station Program - State Forestry and Grassland Administration of China [2021132078]
  3. Scientific Research Fund of Hunan Provincial Education Department [21B0232]
  4. Scientific Research Staring Foundation - Central South University of Forestry and Technology [2020YJ004]

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This study investigates the effects of photosynthetic and hydraulic traits on the responses of forest ecosystem's gross primary productivity (GPP) to drought events. The results show that species with higher photosynthetic rates have better GPP resilience, while species with higher hydraulic safety margins have higher GPP resistance. Additionally, forests in humid regions have higher GPP resilience, while forests in arid regions have higher GPP resistance.
Drought events lead to depressions in gross primary productivity (GPP) of forest ecosystems. Photosynthetic and hydraulic traits are important factors governing GPP variation. However, how these functional traits affect GPP responses to drought has not been well understood. We quantified the capacity of GPP to withstand changes during droughts (GPP_resistance) and its post-drought responses (GPP_resilience) using eddy covariance data from the FLUXNET2015 dataset, and investigated how functional traits of dominant tree species that comprised >80% of the biomass (or composition) influenced GPP_resistance or GPP_resilience. Light-saturated photosynthetic rate of dominant tree species was negatively related to GPP_resistance, and was positively correlated with GPP_resilience. Forests dominated by species with higher hydraulic safety margins (HSM), smaller vessel diameter (V-dia) and lower sensitivity of canopy stomatal conductance per unit land area (G(s)) to droughts had a higher GPP_resistance, while those dominated by species with lower HSM, larger V-dia and higher sensitivity of G(s) to droughts exhibited a higher GPP_resilience. Differences in functional traits of forests located in diverse climate regions led to distinct GPP sensitivities to droughts. Forests located in humid regions had a higher GPP_resilience while those in arid regions exhibited a higher GPP_resistance. Forest GPP_resistance was negatively related to drought intensity, and GPP_resilience was negatively related to drought duration. Our findings highlight the significant role of functional traits in governing forest resistance and resilience to droughts. Overall, forests dominated by species with higher hydraulic safety were more resistant to droughts, while forests containing species with higher photosynthetic and hydraulic efficiency recovered better from drought stress.

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