Increasing precipitation event size increases aboveground net primary productivity in a semi-arid grassland

被引:0
作者
Jana L. Heisler-White
Alan K. Knapp
Eugene F. Kelly
机构
[1] University of Wyoming,Department of Renewable Resources
[2] Colorado State University,Graduate Degree Program in Ecology
[3] Colorado State University,Department of Biology
[4] Colorado State University,Department of Soil and Crop Sciences
来源
Oecologia | 2008年 / 158卷
关键词
Grasslands; Climate change; Precipitation variability; Rain event size; Pulse-reserve paradigm;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Water availability is the primary constraint to aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP) in many terrestrial biomes, and it is an ecosystem driver that will be strongly altered by future climate change. Global circulation models predict a shift in precipitation patterns to growing season rainfall events that are larger in size but fewer in number. This “repackaging” of rainfall into large events with long intervening dry intervals could be particularly important in semi-arid grasslands because it is in marked contrast to the frequent but small events that have historically defined this ecosystem. We investigated the effect of more extreme rainfall patterns on ANPP via the use of rainout shelters and paired this experimental manipulation with an investigation of long-term data for ANPP and precipitation. Experimental plots (n = 15) received the long-term (30-year) mean growing season precipitation quantity; however, this amount was distributed as 12, six, or four events applied manually according to seasonal patterns for May–September. The long-term mean (1940–2005) number of rain events in this shortgrass steppe was 14 events, with a minimum of nine events in years of average precipitation. Thus, our experimental treatments pushed this system beyond its recent historical range of variability. Plots receiving fewer, but larger rain events had the highest rates of ANPP (184 ± 38 g m−2), compared to plots receiving more frequent rainfall (105 ± 24 g m−2). ANPP in all experimental plots was greater than long-term mean ANPP for this system (97 g m−2), which may be explained in part by the more even distribution of applied rain events. Soil moisture data indicated that larger events led to greater soil water content and likely permitted moisture penetration to deeper in the soil profile. These results indicate that semi-arid grasslands are capable of responding immediately and substantially to forecast shifts to more extreme precipitation patterns.
引用
收藏
页码:129 / 140
页数:11
相关论文
共 176 条
[1]  
Burke IC(1998)Plant-soil interactions in temperate grasslands Biogeochemistry 42 121-143
[2]  
Lauenroth WK(1998)Hydraulic lift: consequences of water efflux from the roots of plants Oecologia 113 151-161
[3]  
Vinton MA(2004)Resource pulses, species interactions, and diversity maintenance in arid and semi-arid environments Oecologia 141 236-253
[4]  
Hook PB(1998)Contrasting climatic controls on the estimated productivity of global terrestrial biomes Ecosystems 1 206-215
[5]  
Kelly RA(2000)Climate extremes: observations, modeling, and impacts Science 289 2068-2074
[6]  
Epstein HE(2000)Altering rainfall timing and quantity in a mesic grassland ecosystem: design and performance of rainfall manipulation shelters Ecosystems 3 308-319
[7]  
Aguiar MR(2003)Productivity responses to altered rainfall patterns in a C Oecologia 137 245-251
[8]  
Robles MD(1998)-dominated grassland Oecologia 115 17-25
[9]  
Aguilera MO(1999)Differential use of large summer rainfall events by shrubs and grasses: a manipulative experiment in the Patagonian steppe Clim Change 42 243-283
[10]  
Murphy KL(2005)Changes in the probability of heavy precipitation: important indicators of climate change Global Change Biol 11 322-334