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首页> 外文期刊>Global change biology >Drought's legacy: multiyear hydraulic deterioration underlies widespread aspen forest die-off and portends increased future risk.
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Drought's legacy: multiyear hydraulic deterioration underlies widespread aspen forest die-off and portends increased future risk.

机译:干旱的遗留物:多年的水力恶化是广泛的白杨林死亡的基础,并预示着未来的风险增加。

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Forest mortality constitutes a major uncertainty in projections of climate impacts on terrestrial ecosystems and carbon-cycle feedbacks. Recent drought-induced, widespread forest die-offs highlight that climate change could accelerate forest mortality with its diverse and potentially severe consequences for the global carbon cycle, ecosystem services, and biodiversity. How trees die during drought over multiple years remains largely unknown and precludes mechanistic modeling and prediction of forest die-off with climate change. Here, we examine the physiological basis of a recent multiyear widespread die-off of trembling aspen (Populus tremuloides) across much of western North America. Using observations from both native trees while they are dying and a rainfall exclusion experiment on mature trees, we measure hydraulic performance over multiple seasons and years and assess pathways of accumulated hydraulic damage. We test whether accumulated hydraulic damage can predict the probability of tree survival over 2 years. We find that hydraulic damage persisted and increased in dying trees over multiple years and exhibited few signs of repair. This accumulated hydraulic deterioration is largely mediated by increased vulnerability to cavitation, a process known as cavitation fatigue. Furthermore, this hydraulic damage predicts the probability of interyear stem mortality. Contrary to the expectation that surviving trees have weathered severe drought, the hydraulic deterioration demonstrated here reveals that surviving regions of these forests are actually more vulnerable to future droughts due to accumulated xylem damage. As the most widespread tree species in North America, increasing vulnerability to drought in these forests has important ramifications for ecosystem stability, biodiversity, and ecosystem carbon balance. Our results provide a foundation for incorporating accumulated drought impacts into climate-vegetation models. Finally, our findings highlight the critical role of drought stress accumulation and repair of stress-induced damage for avoiding plant mortality, presenting a dynamic and contingent framework for drought impacts on forest ecosystems.Digital Object Identifier http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.12100
机译:森林死亡率构成了气候对陆地生态系统影响和碳循环反馈的预测的主要不确定性。最近由于干旱引起的广泛的森林死亡,表明气候变化可能会加剧森林死亡率,给全球碳循环,生态系统服务和生物多样性带来多种多样且可能严重的后果。多年干旱期间树木如何死亡仍然未知,并且排除了机械建模和预测森林随气候变化而死亡的可能性。在这里,我们研究了北美西部大部分地区最近多年颤抖的白杨(Populus tremuloides)死亡的生理基础。利用从这两种原生树垂死时的观察结果和成熟树上的降雨排除实验,我们测量了多个季节和多年的水力性能,并评估了累积的水力破坏途径。我们测试累积的水力损害是否可以预测2年以上树木存活的可能性。我们发现,在垂死的树木中,多年以来水力损害持续存在并增加,并且几乎没有修复迹象。这种累积的水力恶化很大程度上是由对气穴的脆弱性增加所介导的,该过程称为气穴疲劳。此外,这种水力损害预测了年际茎杆死亡率的可能性。与幸存的树木已经经受了严重干旱的预期相反,此处显示的水力恶化表明,由于累积的木质部损坏,这些森林的幸存区域实际上更容易受到未来干旱的影响。作为北美最广泛的树种,这些森林在干旱中的脆弱性日益提高,对生态系统稳定性,生物多样性和生态系统碳平衡具有重要影响。我们的结果为将累积的干旱影响纳入气候-植被模型提供了基础。最后,我们的研究结果突出了干旱胁迫积累和修复胁迫引起的损害对避免植物死亡的关键作用,为干旱对森林生态系统的影响提出了动态和偶然的框架。 10.1111 / gcb.12100

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