Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QY, UK
Environmental Change Institute, School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QY, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2018 Oct 8;373(1760):20170410. doi: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0410.
Meteorological extreme events such as El Niño events are expected to affect tropical forest net primary production (NPP) and woody growth, but there has been no large-scale empirical validation of this expectation. We collected a large high-temporal resolution dataset (for 1-13 years depending upon location) of more than 172 000 stem growth measurements using dendrometer bands from across 14 regions spanning Amazonia, Africa and Borneo in order to test how much month-to-month variation in stand-level woody growth of adult tree stems (NPP) can be explained by seasonal variation and interannual meteorological anomalies. A key finding is that woody growth responds differently to meteorological variation between tropical forests with a dry season (where monthly rainfall is less than 100 mm), and aseasonal wet forests lacking a consistent dry season. In seasonal tropical forests, a high degree of variation in woody growth can be predicted from seasonal variation in temperature, vapour pressure deficit, in addition to anomalies of soil water deficit and shortwave radiation. The variation of aseasonal wet forest woody growth is best predicted by the anomalies of vapour pressure deficit, water deficit and shortwave radiation. In total, we predict the total live woody production of the global tropical forest biome to be 2.16 Pg C yr, with an interannual range 1.96-2.26 Pg C yr between 1996-2016, and with the sharpest declines during the strong El Niño events of 1997/8 and 2015/6. There is high geographical variation in hotspots of El Niño-associated impacts, with weak impacts in Africa, and strongly negative impacts in parts of Southeast Asia and extensive regions across central and eastern Amazonia. Overall, there is high correlation ( = -0.75) between the annual anomaly of tropical forest woody growth and the annual mean of the El Niño 3.4 index, driven mainly by strong correlations with anomalies of soil water deficit, vapour pressure deficit and shortwave radiation.This article is part of the discussion meeting issue 'The impact of the 2015/2016 El Niño on the terrestrial tropical carbon cycle: patterns, mechanisms and implications'.
气象极端事件,如厄尔尼诺现象,预计会影响热带森林的净初级生产力(NPP)和木质生长,但这种预期尚未得到大规模的经验验证。我们收集了一个大型的高时间分辨率数据集(取决于位置,范围为 1 到 13 年),其中包括来自亚马逊、非洲和婆罗洲 14 个地区的超过 172000 个树干生长测量值,这些测量值是使用树木生长测量带获得的,目的是检验树木茎干的月度木质生长(NPP)中有多少可以用季节性变化和跨年度气象异常来解释。一个关键的发现是,木质生长对有旱季(每月降雨量小于 100 毫米)的热带森林和无明显旱季的季节性湿润森林之间的气象变化的响应方式不同。在季节性热带森林中,木质生长的高度变化可以通过温度、蒸气压差、土壤水分亏缺和短波辐射的异常来预测。无季节性湿润森林的木质生长变化最好通过蒸气压差、水分亏缺和短波辐射的异常来预测。总的来说,我们预测全球热带森林生物群落的总活木质生产力为 2.16PgCyr,1996-2016 年的年际范围为 1.96-2.26PgCyr,在 1997/8 年和 2015/6 年强烈的厄尔尼诺事件期间,下降最为明显。厄尔尼诺事件相关影响的热点地区在地理上存在很大差异,非洲的影响较弱,东南亚部分地区和亚马孙中部和东部的广大地区受到强烈的负面影响。总的来说,热带森林木质生长的年际异常与厄尔尼诺 3.4 指数的年平均值之间存在高度相关性(= -0.75),这主要是由于与土壤水分亏缺、蒸气压差和短波辐射的异常高度相关。本文是“2015/2016 年厄尔尼诺对陆地热带碳循环的影响:格局、机制和意义”讨论会议的一部分。