Institute for Meteorology and Climate Research, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Campus Alpin, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany; Institute of Geography, University of Augsburg, Augsburg, Germany.
Institute of Geography, University of Augsburg, Augsburg, Germany.
Sci Total Environ. 2019 Jan 10;647:1478-1489. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.07.397. Epub 2018 Jul 31.
In the future the Sudanian savanna - one of West Africa's high-potential "bread baskets" - will likely face shorter rainy seasons with more extreme rains and droughts. That could have serious impacts on the vegetation and its carbon dioxide (CO) exchange with potentially increasing CO emissions accelerating climate warming. Understanding how the CO fluxes in this area respond to environmental variables, in particular rain events, is essential, but available data are scarce. In this study, we monitored net ecosystem exchange (NEE) of CO, rainfall and other environmental parameters during four years at three savannas. Savannas were characterized by different vegetation due to different land use: i) woody and nearly pristine, ii) mixture of cropland and grassland and iii) intensive grazing. The impact of rain events on CO exchange for these contrasting ecosystems were analyzed for single rain events (short-term) and on a yearly time scale (long-term) using three eddy covariance towers. We found that the woody pristine savanna site was a prominent sink of CO (-864 to -1299 g CO m y) while the degraded sites were net CO sources (118 to 605 g CO m y) with a complicated relation with annual rainfall amounts. The NEE responses to single rain events revealed that daytime rain systematically decreased the sink strengths at all sites, which might be associated with decreased light availability. At the degraded sites, additional factors increasing CO losses were rain duration and dry spell length. The observed patterns of immediate CO flux responses to rainfall at differently used savannas indicate strong internal feedbacks between vegetation and land use changes and raise the question whether the CO sink strengths might be overestimated with possible implications for global CO budgets. Sustainable adaptation strategies need to be developed for West Africa.
在未来,苏丹稀树草原——西非一个高潜力的“粮食篮子”之一——可能会面临雨季变短、降雨更极端和干旱更频繁的情况。这可能会对植被及其与二氧化碳(CO)的交换产生严重影响,从而潜在地增加 CO 排放,加速气候变暖。了解该地区的 CO 通量如何响应环境变量,特别是降雨事件,是至关重要的,但现有的数据却很匮乏。在这项研究中,我们在三个稀树草原上监测了四年的净生态系统交换(NEE)、降雨量和其他环境参数。稀树草原由于不同的土地利用而具有不同的植被特征:i)木本和近乎原始的,ii)农田和草地的混合,iii)密集放牧。我们分析了不同的生态系统对单个降雨事件(短期)和年时间尺度(长期)的 CO 交换的影响,使用了三个涡度相关塔。我们发现,木质原始稀树草原是 CO 的显著汇(-864 到-1299g CO m y),而退化的稀树草原则是 CO 的净源(118 到 605g CO m y),与年降雨量有复杂的关系。单个降雨事件对 NEE 的响应表明,白天的降雨会系统地降低所有地点的汇强度,这可能与光照减少有关。在退化的地点,降雨持续时间和干旱期长度是增加 CO 损失的额外因素。不同用途的稀树草原对降雨的 CO 通量即时响应模式表明,植被和土地利用变化之间存在强烈的内部反馈,这引发了一个问题,即 CO 汇强度是否可能被高估,从而对全球 CO 预算产生影响。西非需要制定可持续的适应战略。