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Soil–vegetation moisture capacitor maintains dry season vegetation productivity over India

Dawn Emil Sebastian, Raghu Murtugudde, Subimal Ghosh

2023Scientific Reports18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

India receives more than 70% of its annual rainfall in the summer monsoon from June to September. The rainfall is scanty and scattered for the rest of the year. Combining satellite data and model simulations, we show that the soil-vegetation continuum works as a natural capacitor of water, storing the monsoon pulse and releasing the moisture to the atmosphere through evapotranspiration over approximately 135 days when the moisture supply from precipitation is less than the evapotranspiration losses. The total Gross Primary Productivity of vegetation in India during the capacitor period accounts for almost 35% of the total annual GPP value. It primarily depends on the soil moisture at the beginning of the period, a measure of moisture capacitance of soil, with a correlation of 0.6. Given that India is the second largest contributor to recent global greening, its soil-vegetation water capacitance plays a significant role in the global carbon balance.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental scienceEvapotranspirationVegetation (pathology)Water contentMonsoonPrecipitationMoistureTranspirationHydrology (agriculture)ClimatologyGeographyEcologyGeologyPhotosynthesisMeteorologyGeotechnical engineeringBotanyBiologyMedicinePathologyPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsClimate variability and modelsTree-ring climate responses
Soil–vegetation moisture capacitor maintains dry season vegetation productivity over India | Litcius