Adams Henry D, Guardiola-Claramonte Maite, Barron-Gafford Greg A, Villegas Juan Camilo, Breshears David D, Zou Chris B, Troch Peter A, Huxman Travis E
B2 EarthScience/Biosphere 2, P.O. Box 210158-B, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Apr 28;106(17):7063-6. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0901438106. Epub 2009 Apr 13.
Large-scale biogeographical shifts in vegetation are predicted in response to the altered precipitation and temperature regimes associated with global climate change. Vegetation shifts have profound ecological impacts and are an important climate-ecosystem feedback through their alteration of carbon, water, and energy exchanges of the land surface. Of particular concern is the potential for warmer temperatures to compound the effects of increasingly severe droughts by triggering widespread vegetation shifts via woody plant mortality. The sensitivity of tree mortality to temperature is dependent on which of 2 non-mutually-exclusive mechanisms predominates--temperature-sensitive carbon starvation in response to a period of protracted water stress or temperature-insensitive sudden hydraulic failure under extreme water stress (cavitation). Here we show that experimentally induced warmer temperatures (approximately 4 degrees C) shortened the time to drought-induced mortality in Pinus edulis (piñon shortened pine) trees by nearly a third, with temperature-dependent differences in cumulative respiration costs implicating carbon starvation as the primary mechanism of mortality. Extrapolating this temperature effect to the historic frequency of water deficit in the southwestern United States predicts a 5-fold increase in the frequency of regional-scale tree die-off events for this species due to temperature alone. Projected increases in drought frequency due to changes in precipitation and increases in stress from biotic agents (e.g., bark beetles) would further exacerbate mortality. Our results demonstrate the mechanism by which warmer temperatures have exacerbated recent regional die-off events and background mortality rates. Because of pervasive projected increases in temperature, our results portend widespread increases in the extent and frequency of vegetation die-off.
预计随着全球气候变化导致降水和温度格局改变,植被将发生大规模生物地理迁移。植被迁移具有深远的生态影响,并且通过改变陆地表面的碳、水和能量交换,成为气候与生态系统之间的重要反馈。特别令人担忧的是,温度升高可能会通过引发木本植物死亡导致广泛的植被迁移,从而加剧日益严重的干旱影响。树木死亡率对温度的敏感性取决于两种非相互排斥的机制中哪一种占主导地位——在长期水分胁迫期间对温度敏感的碳饥饿,或在极端水分胁迫(空化)下对温度不敏感的突然水力故障。在这里,我们表明,实验诱导的温度升高(约4摄氏度)使矮松(矮松)树因干旱导致死亡的时间缩短了近三分之一,累积呼吸成本的温度依赖性差异表明碳饥饿是死亡的主要机制。将这种温度效应外推到美国西南部历史上的缺水频率,预计仅温度因素就会使该物种区域尺度树木死亡事件的频率增加5倍。由于降水变化导致干旱频率预计增加,以及生物因素(如树皮甲虫)造成的压力增加,将进一步加剧死亡率。我们的结果证明了温度升高加剧近期区域死亡事件和背景死亡率的机制。由于预计温度会普遍升高,我们的结果预示着植被死亡的范围和频率将广泛增加。