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Hydraulic Diversity of Forests Regulates Ecosystem Resilience During DroughtPlants influence the atmosphere through fluxes of carbon, water and energy, and can intensify drought through land–atmosphere feedback effects. The diversity of plant functional traits in forests, especially physiological traits related to water (hydraulic) transport, may have a critical role in land–atmosphere feedback, particularly during drought. Here we combine 352 site-years of eddy covariance measurements from 40 forest sites, remote-sensing observations of plant water content and plant functional-trait data to test whether the diversity in plant traits affects the response of the ecosystem to drought. We find evidence that higher hydraulic diversity buffers variation in ecosystem flux during dry periods across temperate and boreal forests. Hydraulic traits were the predominant significant predictors of cross-site patterns in drought response. By contrast, standard leaf and wood traits, such as specific leaf area and wood density, had little explanatory power. Our results demonstrate that diversity in the hydraulic traits of trees mediates ecosystem resilience to drought and is likely to have an important role in future ecosystem–atmosphere feedback effects in a changing climate.
Document ID
20230001223
Acquisition Source
2230 Support
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
William R L Anderegg
(University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah, United States)
Alexandra G Konings
(Stanford University Stanford, California, United States)
Anna T Trugman
(University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah, United States)
Kailiang Yu
(University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah, United States)
David R Bowling
(University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah, United States)
Robert Gabbitas
(University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah, United States)
Daniel S Karp
(University of California, Davis Davis, California, United States)
Stephen Pacala
(Princeton University Princeton, New Jersey, United States)
John S Sperry
(University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah, United States)
Benjamin N Sulman
(Princeton University Princeton, New Jersey, United States)
Nicole Zenes
(University of Utah Salt Lake City, Utah, United States)
Date Acquired
January 25, 2023
Publication Date
September 19, 2018
Publication Information
Publication: Nature
Publisher: Nature Research
Volume: 561
Issue: 7724
Issue Publication Date: September 27, 2018
ISSN: 0028-0836
e-ISSN: 1476-4687
Subject Category
Earth Resources and Remote Sensing
Report/Patent Number
NIHMS997061
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: 80NSSC18K0715
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSF 1714972
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSF 1802880
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Content with NO Permission
Technical Review
Professional Review
Keywords
Climate and Earth system modelling
Climate-change ecology
Forest ecology

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