Loik Michael E, Breshears David D, Lauenroth William K, Belnap Jayne
Department of Environmental Studies, University of California, 1156 High Street, Santa Cruz 95064, USA.
Oecologia. 2004 Oct;141(2):269-81. doi: 10.1007/s00442-004-1570-y. Epub 2004 May 8.
In dryland ecosystems, the timing and magnitude of precipitation pulses drive many key ecological processes, notably soil water availability for plants and soil microbiota. Plant available water has frequently been viewed simply as incoming precipitation, yet processes at larger scales drive precipitation pulses, and the subsequent transformation of precipitation pulses to plant available water are complex. We provide an overview of the factors that influence the spatial and temporal availability of water to plants and soil biota using examples from western USA drylands. Large spatial- and temporal-scale drivers of regional precipitation patterns include the position of the jet streams and frontal boundaries, the North American Monsoon, El Niño Southern Oscillation events, and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. Topography and orography modify the patterns set up by the larger-scale drivers, resulting in regional patterns (10(2)-10(6) km2) of precipitation magnitude, timing, and variation. Together, the large-scale and regional drivers impose important pulsed patterns on long-term precipitation trends at landscape scales, in which most site precipitation is received as small events (< 5 mm) and with most of the intervals between events being short (< 10 days). The drivers also influence the translation of precipitation events into available water via linkages between soil water content and components of the water budget, including interception, infiltration and runoff, soil evaporation, plant water use and hydraulic redistribution, and seepage below the rooting zone. Soil water content varies not only vertically with depth but also horizontally beneath versus between plants and/or soil crusts in ways that are ecologically important to different plant and crust types. We highlight the importance of considering larger-scale drivers, and their effects on regional patterns; small, frequent precipitation events; and spatio-temporal heterogeneity in soil water content in translating from climatology to precipitation pulses to the dryland ecohydrology of water availability for plants and soil biota.
在旱地生态系统中,降水脉冲的时间和强度驱动着许多关键的生态过程,尤其是植物和土壤微生物可利用的土壤水分。植物可利用水常常被简单地视为入射降水,然而更大尺度的过程驱动着降水脉冲,并且随后降水脉冲向植物可利用水的转化是复杂的。我们以美国西部旱地为例,概述影响植物和土壤生物群可利用水的时空有效性的因素。区域降水模式的大时空尺度驱动因素包括急流和锋面边界的位置、北美季风、厄尔尼诺南方涛动事件以及太平洋年代际振荡。地形和地貌改变了由更大尺度驱动因素所形成的模式,导致降水强度、时间和变化的区域模式(10² - 10⁶平方千米)。大尺度和区域驱动因素共同在景观尺度上对长期降水趋势施加了重要的脉冲模式,其中大多数站点降水以小事件(<5毫米)的形式接收,并且事件之间的大多数间隔较短(<10天)。这些驱动因素还通过土壤含水量与水分收支各组成部分之间的联系,影响降水事件向可利用水的转化,这些组成部分包括截留、入渗和径流、土壤蒸发、植物水分利用和水力再分配以及根系层以下的渗漏。土壤含水量不仅随深度垂直变化,而且在植物和/或土壤结皮之下与之间水平变化,其方式对不同植物和结皮类型具有重要生态意义。我们强调在从气候学转化为降水脉冲,再到旱地植物和土壤生物群可利用水的生态水文学过程中,考虑更大尺度驱动因素及其对区域模式的影响、小而频繁的降水事件以及土壤含水量的时空异质性的重要性。