Academic Journal

Examining the evidence for decoupling between photosynthesis and transpiration during heat extremes

Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Τίτλος: Examining the evidence for decoupling between photosynthesis and transpiration during heat extremes
Συγγραφείς: M. G. De Kauwe, B. E. Medlyn, A. J. Pitman, J. E. Drake, A. Ukkola, A. Griebel, E. Pendall, S. Prober, M. Roderick
Πηγή: Biogeosciences, Vol 16, Pp 903-916 (2019)
Στοιχεία εκδότη: Copernicus Publications, 2019.
Έτος έκδοσης: 2019
Συλλογή: LCC:Ecology
LCC:Life
LCC:Geology
Θεματικοί όροι: Ecology, QH540-549.5, Life, QH501-531, Geology, QE1-996.5
Περιγραφή: Recent experimental evidence suggests that during heat extremes, wooded ecosystems may decouple photosynthesis and transpiration, reducing photosynthesis to near zero but increasing transpiration into the boundary layer. This feedback may act to dampen, rather than amplify, heat extremes in wooded ecosystems. We examined eddy covariance databases (OzFlux and FLUXNET2015) to identify whether there was field-based evidence to support these experimental findings. We focused on two types of heat extremes: (i) the 3 days leading up to a temperature extreme, defined as including a daily maximum temperature >37 ∘C (similar to the widely used TXx metric), and (ii) heatwaves, defined as 3 or more consecutive days above 35 ∘C. When focusing on (i), we found some evidence of reduced photosynthesis and sustained or increased latent heat fluxes at seven Australian evergreen wooded flux sites. However, when considering the role of vapour pressure deficit and focusing on (ii), we were unable to conclusively disentangle the decoupling between photosynthesis and latent heat flux from the effect of increasing the vapour pressure deficit. Outside of Australia, the Tier-1 FLUXNET2015 database provided limited scope to tackle this issue as it does not sample sufficient high temperature events with which to probe the physiological response of trees to extreme heat. Thus, further work is required to determine whether this photosynthetic decoupling occurs widely, ideally by matching experimental species with those found at eddy covariance tower sites. Such measurements would allow this decoupling mechanism to be probed experimentally and at the ecosystem scale. Transpiration during heatwaves remains a key issue to resolve, as no land surface model includes a decoupling mechanism, and any potential dampening of the land–atmosphere amplification is thus not included in climate model projections.
Τύπος εγγράφου: article
Περιγραφή αρχείου: electronic resource
Γλώσσα: English
ISSN: 1726-4170
1726-4189
Relation: https://www.biogeosciences.net/16/903/2019/bg-16-903-2019.pdf; https://doaj.org/toc/1726-4170; https://doaj.org/toc/1726-4189
DOI: 10.5194/bg-16-903-2019
Σύνδεσμος πρόσβασης: https://doaj.org/article/8ee3aa2c6e1f4ff5b1d55ce805f7cdcb
Αριθμός Καταχώρησης: edsdoj.8ee3aa2c6e1f4ff5b1d55ce805f7cdcb
Βάση Δεδομένων: Directory of Open Access Journals
Περιγραφή
ISSN:17264170
17264189
DOI:10.5194/bg-16-903-2019