Forests (Sep 2024)

Heat and Drought Have Exacerbated the Midday Depression Observed in a Subtropical Fir Forest by a Geostationary Satellite

  • Qianqian Xie,
  • Kexin Chen,
  • Tong Li,
  • Jia Liu,
  • Yuqiu Wang,
  • Xiaolu Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/f15091572
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 9
p. 1572

Abstract

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Recently, increasing heat and drought events have threatened the resilience of Chinese fir forests. Trees primarily respond to these threats by downregulating photosynthesis including through stomatal limitation that causes a drop in productivity at noon (known as the midday depression). However, the effects of these events on midday and afternoon GPP inhibition are rarely analyzed on a fine timescale. This may result in negligence of critical responses. Here, we investigated the impact of climatic events on the midday depression of photosynthesis at a subtropical fir forest in Huitong from 2016 to 2022 using data from the Himawari 8 meteorological satellite and flux tower. Our results indicated that the highest number of midday depression occurred in 2022 (126 times) with the highest average temperature (29.1 °C). A higher incidence of midday depression occurred in summer and autumn, with 48 and 34 occurrences, respectively. Compound drought, heat, and drought events induced increases in midday depression at 74.3%, 66.0%, and 47.5%. Thus, trees are more likely to adopt midday depression as an adaptive strategy during compound drought and heat events. This study can inform forest management and lead to improvements in Earth system models.

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