4.8 Article

Drought's legacy: multiyear hydraulic deterioration underlies widespread aspen forest die-off and portends increased future risk

期刊

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
卷 19, 期 4, 页码 1188-1196

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12100

关键词

biosphereatmosphere interactions; climate change; ecosystem shift; forest mortality; vegetation model; xylem cavitation

资金

  1. Bill Lane Center for the American West
  2. Morrison Institute
  3. Phi Beta Kappa Northern California Association
  4. Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve
  5. Stanford Biology SCORE Program
  6. NSF DDIG
  7. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science Graduate Fellowship Program (DOE SCGF)
  8. DOE [DE-AC05-06OR23100]
  9. Canada Research Chair program
  10. NSERC
  11. Direct For Biological Sciences
  12. Division Of Environmental Biology [1110058] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Forest mortality constitutes a major uncertainty in projections of climate impacts on terrestrial ecosystems and carbon-cycle feedbacks. Recent drought-induced, widespread forest die-offs highlight that climate change could accelerate forest mortality with its diverse and potentially severe consequences for the global carbon cycle, ecosystem services, and biodiversity. How trees die during drought over multiple years remains largely unknown and precludes mechanistic modeling and prediction of forest die-off with climate change. Here, we examine the physiological basis of a recent multiyear widespread die-off of trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides) across much of western North America. Using observations from both native trees while they are dying and a rainfall exclusion experiment on mature trees, we measure hydraulic performance over multiple seasons and years and assess pathways of accumulated hydraulic damage. We test whether accumulated hydraulic damage can predict the probability of tree survival over 2years. We find that hydraulic damage persisted and increased in dying trees over multiple years and exhibited few signs of repair. This accumulated hydraulic deterioration is largely mediated by increased vulnerability to cavitation, a process known as cavitation fatigue. Furthermore, this hydraulic damage predicts the probability of interyear stem mortality. Contrary to the expectation that surviving trees have weathered severe drought, the hydraulic deterioration demonstrated here reveals that surviving regions of these forests are actually more vulnerable to future droughts due to accumulated xylem damage. As the most widespread tree species in North America, increasing vulnerability to drought in these forests has important ramifications for ecosystem stability, biodiversity, and ecosystem carbon balance. Our results provide a foundation for incorporating accumulated drought impacts into climatevegetation models. Finally, our findings highlight the critical role of drought stress accumulation and repair of stress-induced damage for avoiding plant mortality, presenting a dynamic and contingent framework for drought impacts on forest ecosystems.

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