Compound hydroclimatic extremes in a semi‐arid grassland: Drought, deluge, and the carbon cycle
Climate change is predicted to increase the frequency and intensity of extreme events including droughts and large precipitation events or “deluges.” While many studies have focused on the ecological impacts of individual events (e.g., a heat wave), there is growing recognition that when extreme eve...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Global change biology 2022-04, Vol.28 (8), p.2611-2621 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Climate change is predicted to increase the frequency and intensity of extreme events including droughts and large precipitation events or “deluges.” While many studies have focused on the ecological impacts of individual events (e.g., a heat wave), there is growing recognition that when extreme events co‐occur as compound extremes, (e.g., a heatwave during a drought), the additive effects on ecosystems are often greater than either extreme alone. In this study, we assessed a unique type of extreme—a contrasting compound extreme—where the extremes may have offsetting, rather than additive ecological effects, by examining how a deluge during a drought impacts productivity and carbon cycling in a semi‐arid grassland. The experiment consisted of four treatments: a control (average precipitation), an extreme drought (95th percentile), or an extreme drought interrupted by the equivalent amount of precipitation added in several smaller events. We highlight three key results. First, extreme drought resulted in early senescence, reduced carbon uptake, and a decline in net primary productivity relative to the control treatment. Second, the deluge imposed during extreme drought stimulated carbon fluxes and plant growth well above the levels of both the control and the drought treatment with several additional smaller rainfall events, emphasizing the importance of precipitation amount, event size, and timing. Third, while the deluge's positive effects on carbon fluxes and plant growth persisted for 1 month, the deluge did not completely offset the negative effects of extreme drought on end‐of‐season productivity. Thus, in the case of these contrasting hydroclimatic extremes, a deluge during a drought can stimulate temporally dynamic ecosystem processes (e.g., net ecosystem exchange) while only partially compensating for reductions in ecosystem functions over longer time scales (e.g., aboveground net primary productivity).
Although climate extremes are often studied as isolated events, most major environmental disasters result from compound climate extremes, defined as “the combination of multiple drivers and/or hazards." Here we experimentally imposed a unique combination of climate extremes—a heavy rain event or "deluge" during a drought—to understand how contrasting extremes impact plant growth, carbon cycling, and productivity in a grassland ecosystem. Our results suggest that a deluge during a |
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ISSN: | 1354-1013 1365-2486 |
DOI: | 10.1111/gcb.16081 |