Multifaceted characteristics of dryland aridity changes in a warming world
Xu Lian,Shilong Piao,Shilong Piao,Anping Chen,Chris Huntingford,Bojie Fu,Bojie Fu,Laurent Li,Jianping Huang,Justin Sheffield,Alexis Berg,Trevor F. Keenan,Trevor F. Keenan,Tim R. McVicar,Tim R. McVicar,Yoshihide Wada,Xuhui Wang,Tao Wang,Yuting Yang,Michael L. Roderick,Michael L. Roderick +20 more
- 01 Apr 2021
- Vol. 2, Iss: 4, pp 232-250
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors synthesize observational and modelling evidence to demonstrate emerging differences in dryland aridity dependent on the specific metric considered and place these climate-induced aridity changes in the context of exacerbated water scarcity driven by rapidly increasing anthropogenic needs for freshwater to support population growth and economic development.
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Abstract: Drylands are an essential component of the Earth System and are among the most vulnerable to climate change. In this Review, we synthesize observational and modelling evidence to demonstrate emerging differences in dryland aridity dependent on the specific metric considered. Although warming heightens vapour pressure deficit and, thus, atmospheric demand for water in both the observations and the projections, these changes do not wholly propagate to exacerbate soil moisture and runoff deficits. Moreover, counter-intuitively, many arid ecosystems have exhibited significant greening and enhanced vegetation productivity since the 1980s. Such divergence between atmospheric and ecohydrological aridity changes can primarily be related to moisture limitations by dry soils and plant physiological regulations of evapotranspiration under elevated CO2. The latter process ameliorates water stress on plant growth and decelerates warming-enhanced water losses from soils, while simultaneously warming and drying the near-surface air. We place these climate-induced aridity changes in the context of exacerbated water scarcity driven by rapidly increasing anthropogenic needs for freshwater to support population growth and economic development. Under future warming, dryland ecosystems might respond non-linearly, caused by, for example, complex ecosystem–hydrology–human interactions and increased mortality risks from drought and heat stress, which is a foremost priority for future research. Estimates of global dryland changes are often conflicting. This Review discusses and quantifies observed and projected aridity changes, revealing divergent responses between atmospheric and ecohydrological metrics that can be explained by plant physiological responses to elevated CO2.
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Wenping Yuan,Yi Zheng,Shilong Piao,Philippe Ciais,Danica Lombardozzi,Ying-Ping Wang,Ying-Ping Wang,Youngryel Ryu,Guixing Chen,Wenjie Dong,Zhongming Hu,Atul K. Jain,Chongya Jiang,Etsushi Kato,Shihua Li,Sebastian Lienert,Shuguang Liu,Julia E. M. S. Nabel,Zhangcai Qin,Timothy A. Quine,Stephen Sitch,William K. Smith,Fan Wang,Chaoyang Wu,Zhiqiang Xiao,Song Yang +25 more
TL;DR: The results highlight that the impacts of VPD on vegetation growth should be adequately considered to assess ecosystem responses to future climate conditions.
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