Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2021)

Extreme wet events as important as extreme dry events in controlling spatial patterns of vegetation greenness anomalies

  • Caroline A Famiglietti,
  • Anna M Michalak,
  • Alexandra G Konings

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/abfc78
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. 074014

Abstract

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Understanding plant responses to hydrological extremes is critical for projections of the future terrestrial carbon uptake, but much more is known about the impacts of drought than of extreme wet conditions. However, the latter may control ecosystem-scale photosynthesis more strongly than the former in certain regions. Here we take a data-driven, location-based approach to evaluate where wet and dry extremes most affect photosynthesis. By comparing the sensitivity of vegetation greenness during extreme wetness to that during extreme dryness over a 34 year record, we find that regions where the impact of wet extremes dominates are nearly as common as regions where drought impacts dominate. We also demonstrate that the responses of wet-sensitive regions are not uniform and are instead controlled by multiple, often interacting, mechanisms. Given predicted increases in the frequency and intensity of extreme hydrological events with climate change, the consequences of extreme wet conditions on local and global carbon cycling will likely be amplified in future decades.

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