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Plant hydraulics accentuates the effect of atmospheric moisture stress on transpiration

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Transpiration, the dominant component of terrestrial evapotranspiration (ET), directly connects the water, energy and carbon cycles and is typically restricted by soil and atmospheric (for example, the vapour pressure deficit… Click to show full abstract

Transpiration, the dominant component of terrestrial evapotranspiration (ET), directly connects the water, energy and carbon cycles and is typically restricted by soil and atmospheric (for example, the vapour pressure deficit (VPD)) moisture stresses through plant hydraulic processes. These sources of stress are likely to diverge under climate change, with a globally enhanced VPD but more variable and uncertain changes in soil moisture. Here, using a model–data fusion approach, we demonstrate that the common empirical approach used in most Earth system models to evaluate the ET response to soil moisture and VPD, which neglects plant hydraulics, underestimates ET sensitivity to VPD and compensates by overestimating the sensitivity to soil moisture stress. A hydraulic model that describes water transport through the plant better captures ET under high VPD conditions for wide-ranging soil moisture states. These findings highlight the central role of plant hydraulics in regulating the increasing importance of atmospheric moisture stress on biosphere–atmosphere interactions under elevated temperatures. Evapotranspiration links productivity with water cycling between land and atmosphere. A model including plant hydraulics better describes the response of evapotranspiration to stress from vapour pressure deficit and soil moisture under rising temperatures than approaches common in Earth system models.

Keywords: moisture; plant; moisture stress; plant hydraulics; soil moisture

Journal Title: Nature Climate Change
Year Published: 2020

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