4.8 Article

Local groundwater decline exacerbates response of dryland riparian woodlands to climatic drought

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 28, 期 22, 页码 6771-6788

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16376

关键词

climate change; climate gradient; dendroecology; intermittent river; Populus spp.; riparian phreatophyte; Santa Clara River (California); semi-arid

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [BCS-1660490, EAR-1700517, EAR-1700555]
  2. U. S. Department of Defense [RC18-1006]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study analyzed riparian cottonwood stands along the largest remaining free-flowing river in Southern California and found that the rate of groundwater decline is the primary driver of drought stress for these woodlands. The trees were more sensitive to temperature at sites with faster groundwater decline. The study also identified a threshold of tolerance to groundwater decline at 0.5 m year(-1), beyond which drought stress becomes increasingly evident and severe.
Dryland riparian woodlands are considered to be locally buffered from droughts by shallow and stable groundwater levels. However, climate change is causing more frequent and severe drought events, accompanied by warmer temperatures, collectively threatening the persistence of these groundwater dependent ecosystems through a combination of increasing evaporative demand and decreasing groundwater supply. We conducted a dendro-isotopic analysis of radial growth and seasonal (semi-annual) carbon isotope discrimination (Delta C-13) to investigate the response of riparian cottonwood stands to the unprecedented California-wide drought from 2012 to 2019, along the largest remaining free-flowing river in Southern California. Our goals were to identify principal drivers and indicators of drought stress for dryland riparian woodlands, determine their thresholds of tolerance to hydroclimatic stressors, and ultimately assess their vulnerability to climate change. Riparian trees were highly responsive to drought conditions along the river, exhibiting suppressed growth and strong stomatal closure (inferred from reduced Delta C-13) during peak drought years. However, patterns of radial growth and Delta C-13 were quite variable among sites that differed in climatic conditions and rate of groundwater decline. We show that the rate of groundwater decline, as opposed to climate factors, was the primary driver of site differences in drought stress, and trees showed greater sensitivity to temperature at sites subjected to faster groundwater decline. Across sites, higher correlation between radial growth and Delta C-13 for individual trees, and higher inter-correlation of Delta C-13 among trees were indicative of greater drought stress. Trees showed a threshold of tolerance to groundwater decline at 0.5 m year(-1) beyond which drought stress became increasingly evident and severe. For sites that exceeded this threshold, peak physiological stress occurred when total groundwater recession exceeded similar to 3 m. These findings indicate that drought-induced groundwater decline associated with more extreme droughts is a primary threat to dryland riparian woodlands and increases their susceptibility to projected warmer temperatures.

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