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Increasing Sensitivity of Tree Radial Growth to Precipitation

Tiewei Li, Bin He, Deliang Chen, Hans W. Chen, Lanlan Guo, Wenping Yuan, Keyan Fang, Feng Shi, Lianyou Liu, Huan Zheng, Ling Huang, Xiuchen Wu, Xingming Hao, Xiang Zhao, Weiguo Jiang

2024Geophysical Research Letters15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The sensitivity of tree growth to precipitation regulates their responses to drought, and is a crucial metric for predicting ecosystem dynamics and vulnerability. Sensitivity may be changing with continuing climate change, yet a comprehensive assessment of its change is still lacking. We utilized tree ring measurements from 3,044 sites, climate data and CO 2 concentrations obtained from monitoring stations, combined with dynamic global vegetation models to investigate spatiotemporal changes in the sensitivity over the past century. We observed an increasing sensitivity since around 1950. This increased sensitivity was particularly pronounced in arid biomes due to the combined effect of increased precipitation and elevated CO 2 . While elevated CO 2 reduced the sensitivity of the humid regions, the intensified water pressure caused by decreased precipitation still increased the sensitivity. Our findings suggest an escalating vulnerability of tree growth to precipitation change, which may increase the risk of tree mortality under future intensified drought.

Topics & Concepts

PrecipitationEnvironmental scienceBiomeSensitivity (control systems)Vulnerability (computing)Climate changeClimatologyAridVegetation (pathology)Metric (unit)Tree (set theory)DendrochronologyAtmospheric sciencesEcosystemPhysical geographyEcologyGeologyGeographyMeteorologyBiologyMathematicsMedicineComputer scienceEconomicsEngineeringElectronic engineeringComputer securityPathologyPaleontologyMathematical analysisOperations managementTree-ring climate responsesPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsClimate variability and models
Increasing Sensitivity of Tree Radial Growth to Precipitation | Litcius