Impacts of elevated CO2, climate change and their interactions on water budgets in four different catchments in Australia

被引:28
|
作者
Cheng, Lei [1 ]
Zhang, Lu [1 ]
Wang, Ying-Ping [2 ]
Yu, Qiang [3 ]
Eamus, Derek [3 ,4 ]
O'Grady, Anthony [5 ]
机构
[1] CSIRO Land & Water Flagship, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia
[2] CSIRO Ocean & Atmosphere Flagship, Aspendale, Vic 3195, Australia
[3] Univ Technol Sydney, Fac Sci, Plant Funct Biol & Climate Change Cluster, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia
[4] Univ Technol Sydney, Natl Ctr Groundwater Res & Training, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia
[5] CSIRO Land & Water Flagship, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia
关键词
Elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration; Carbon-water coupling relationship; Changing climate; Water balance; Physiological effects; ATMOSPHERIC CO2; USE EFFICIENCY; RISING CO2; VEGETATION FEEDBACKS; ECOSYSTEM CARBON; ENRICHMENT FACE; GLOBAL CHANGE; RESPONSES; MODEL; RUNOFF;
D O I
10.1016/j.jhydrol.2014.09.020
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
Future water availability is affected directly by climate change mainly through changes in precipitation and indirectly by the biological effects of climate change and elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration (eCO(2)) through changes in vegetation water use. Previous studies of climate change impact on hydrology have focused on the direct impact and little has been reported in the literature on catchment-scale the indirect impact. In this study, we calibrated an ecohydrological model (WAVES) and used this model to estimate the direct and indirect effects and the interactive effect between climate change and eCO(2) on water availability in four different catchments in Australia with contrasting climate regime and vegetation cover. These catchments were: a water-limited forest catchment and an energy-limited forest catchment, a water-limited grass catchment and an energy-limited grass catchment. The future meteorological forcing was projected from similar to 2 GCMs representing a period centred on 2050s and future CO2 concentration was set as 550 ppm. Modelling experiments show that impacts of eCO(2) and projected climate change on vegetation growth, evapotranspiration (ET) and runoff were in the same magnitude but opposite directions in all four catchments, except for the effects on runoff in the energy-limited grass catchment. Predicted responses of runoff to eCO(2) indicate that eCO(2) increased runoff in the energy-limited forest catchment by 2% but decreased runoff in other three catchments from 1% to 18%. This study indicates that rising CO2 increases ecosystem water use efficiency but it does not necessarily result in increased runoff because elevated CO2 also stimulates vegetation growth and increases ET. Elevated CO2 was proved to have greater impacts on runoff than climate change in the forest catchments. Modelling experiments also suggest that interactive effects between climate and CO2 are important, especially for predicting leaf area index (LAI) and ET in grassland catchments or runoff in water-limited catchments, where interactive effects were 1-6%. It implies that the assumption that linear combination of individual effects in most of previous studies is not appropriate. This study highlights the importance of considering elevated CO2 in assessing climate change impacts on catchment-scale water balance and failure to account for direct eCO(2) effect or its interactive effects can lead to large bias in the predictions of future water budgets, especially for the water-limited catchments in Australia. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1350 / 1361
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Elevated CO2 and temperature impacts on different components of soil CO2 efflux in Douglas-fir terracosms
    Lin, GH
    Ehleringer, JR
    Rygiewicz, PT
    Johnson, MG
    Tingey, DT
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 1999, 5 (02) : 157 - 168
  • [32] Potential Impacts of Climate Change on the Water Quality of Different Water Bodies
    Xia, X. H.
    Wu, Q.
    Mou, X. L.
    Lai, Y. J.
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATICS, 2015, 25 (02) : 85 - 98
  • [34] Climate change and elevated CO2 favor forest over savanna under different future scenarios in South Asia
    Kumar, Dushyant
    Pfeiffer, Mirjam
    Gaillard, Camille
    Langan, Liam
    Scheiter, Simon
    BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2021, 18 (09) : 2957 - 2979
  • [35] Paleoclimate -: CO2 and climate change
    Crowley, TJ
    Berner, RA
    SCIENCE, 2001, 292 (5518) : 870 - 872
  • [36] Climate change -: CO2 arithmetic
    Broecker, Wallace S.
    SCIENCE, 2007, 315 (5817) : 1371 - 1371
  • [37] Response of microalgae to elevated CO2 and temperature: impact of climate change on freshwater ecosystems
    Li, Wei
    Xu, Xiaoguang
    Fujibayashi, Megumu
    Niu, Qigui
    Tanaka, Nobuyuki
    Nishimura, Osamu
    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH, 2016, 23 (19) : 19847 - 19860
  • [38] Land management trumps the effects of climate change and elevated CO2 on grassland functioning
    Thebault, Aurelie
    Mariotte, Pierre
    Lortie, Christopher J.
    MacDougall, Andrew S.
    JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2014, 102 (04) : 896 - 904
  • [39] Response of microalgae to elevated CO2 and temperature: impact of climate change on freshwater ecosystems
    Wei Li
    Xiaoguang Xu
    Megumu Fujibayashi
    Qigui Niu
    Nobuyuki Tanaka
    Osamu Nishimura
    Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 2016, 23 : 19847 - 19860
  • [40] Mutual inhibition effects of elevated CO2 and climate change on global forest GPP
    Ji, Yongyue
    Zeng, Sidong
    Liu, Xin
    Xia, Jun
    ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2024, 252