4.4 Article

Topographic controls on spatial patterns of conifer transpiration and net primary productivity under climate warming in mountain ecosystems

Journal

ECOHYDROLOGY
Volume 2, Issue 4, Pages 541-554

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/eco.88

Keywords

alpine ecosystems; transpiration; net primary productivity; climate change; conifer; hydrologic modelling; snow; Sierra Nevada

Funding

  1. USGS
  2. NASA

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The response of forests to it warmer climate depends upon the direct impacts of temperature on forest ecophysiology and indirect effects related to a range of biogeophysical processes. In alpine regions, reduced snow accumulation and earlier melt of seasonal snowpacks are expected hydrologic consequences of warming. For forests, this leads to earlier soil moisture recharge, and may increase summer drought stress. At the same time, increased air temperature alters plant net primary productivity. Most models of climate change impacts focus either on hydrologic behaviour or ecosystem structure or function. In this Study we address the interactions between them. We use a Coupled model of eco-hydrologic processes to estimate changes in evapotranspiration and vegetation productivity under temperature warming scenarios. Results from Yosemite National Park, in the California Sierra Nevada, suggest that for most snow-dominated elevations, the shift in the timing of recharge is likely to lead to declines in productivity and vegetation water use, even with increased water-use efficiency associated with elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations. The strength of this effect, however, depends upon interactions between several factors that vary substantially across elevation gradients, including the initial timing of melt relative to the Summer growing season, vegetation growth, and the extent to which initial vegetation is water-limited or temperature-limited. These climate-driven changes in vegetation water use also have important implications for summer streamflow. Results from this analysis provide a framework that can be used to develop strategic measurement campaigns and to extrapolate from local measurements of vegetation responses to watershed scale patterns. Copyright (c) 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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