Masdar Institute, Khalifa University of Science and Technology, PO Box 54224, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates;
Department of Civil Infrastructure and Environmental Engineering, Khalifa University of Science and Technology, PO Box 127788, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2020 Jul 28;117(30):17635-17642. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2005925117. Epub 2020 Jul 10.
Soil-salinization affects, to a different extent, more than one-third of terrestrial river basins (estimate based on the Food and Agriculture Organization Harmonized World Soil Database, 2012). Among these, many are endorheic and ephemeral systems already encompassing different degrees of aridity, land degradation, and vulnerability to climate change. The primary effect of salinization is to limit plant water uptake and evapotranspiration, thereby reducing available soil moisture and impairing soil fertility. In this, salinization resembles aridity and-similarly to aridity-may impose significant controls on hydrological partitioning and the strength of land-vegetation-atmosphere interactions at the catchment scale. However, the long-term impacts of salinization on the terrestrial water balance are still largely unquantified. Here, we introduce a modified Budyko's framework explicitly accounting for catchment-scale salinization and species-specific plant salt tolerance. The proposed framework is used to interpret the water-budget data of 237 Australian catchments-29% of which are already severely salt-affected-from the Australian Water Availability Project (AWAP). Our results provide theoretical and experimental evidence that salinization does influence the hydrological partitioning of salt-affected watersheds, imposing significant constraints on water availability and enhancing aridity. The same approach can be applied to estimate salinization level and vegetation salt tolerance at the basin scale, which would be difficult to assess through classical observational techniques. We also demonstrate that plant salt tolerance has a preeminent role in regulating the feedback of vegetation on the soil water budget of salt-affected basins.
土壤盐渍化在不同程度上影响了超过三分之一的陆地河流流域(基于 2012 年粮食及农业组织协调的世界土壤数据库的估计)。其中,许多是内陆和短暂河流系统,已经包含了不同程度的干旱、土地退化和对气候变化的脆弱性。盐渍化的主要影响是限制植物的水分吸收和蒸散作用,从而减少可用土壤水分并损害土壤肥力。在这方面,盐渍化类似于干旱,并且——与干旱相似——可能对流域尺度的水文分配和陆地-植被-大气相互作用的强度施加重大控制。然而,盐渍化对陆地水平衡的长期影响在很大程度上仍未量化。在这里,我们引入了一个经过修改的布地克框架,明确考虑了集水区尺度的盐渍化和特定物种的植物耐盐性。所提出的框架用于解释来自澳大利亚水可用性项目(AWAP)的 237 个澳大利亚流域的水预算数据,其中 29%已经受到严重盐化影响。我们的研究结果提供了理论和实验证据,证明盐渍化确实会影响受盐化影响的流域的水文分配,对水的可用性施加重大限制并增强干旱程度。同样的方法可以应用于估计流域尺度的盐化水平和植被耐盐性,这很难通过经典的观测技术进行评估。我们还表明,植物耐盐性在调节受盐化影响的流域的植被对土壤水分预算的反馈方面具有突出的作用。