The role of ecosystem transpiration in creating alternate moisture regimes by influencing atmospheric moisture convergence

Author:

Makarieva Anastassia M.12ORCID,Nefiodov Andrei V.2ORCID,Nobre Antonio Donato3ORCID,Baudena Mara4ORCID,Bardi Ugo5ORCID,Sheil Douglas678ORCID,Saleska Scott R.9ORCID,Molina Ruben D.10ORCID,Rammig Anja11ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Advanced Study Technical University of Munich Garching Germany

2. Theoretical Physics Division Petersburg Nuclear Physics Institute St. Petersburg Russia

3. Centro de Ciência do Sistema Terrestre INPE São Paulo Brazil

4. National Research Council of Italy Institute of Atmospheric Sciences and Climate (CNR‐ISAC) Torino Italy

5. Department of Chemistry University of Florence Firenze Italy

6. Forest Ecology and Forest Management Group Wageningen University & Research Wageningen The Netherlands

7. Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR) Kota Bogor Indonesia

8. Faculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resource Management Norwegian University of Life Sciences Ås Norway

9. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology University of Arizona Tucson Arizona USA

10. Escuela Ambiental, Facultad de Ingeniería Universidad de Antioquia Medellín Colombia

11. Technical University of Munich School of Life Sciences Freising Germany

Abstract

AbstractThe terrestrial water cycle links the soil and atmosphere moisture reservoirs through four fluxes: precipitation, evaporation, runoff, and atmospheric moisture convergence (net import of water vapor to balance runoff). Each of these processes is essential for sustaining human and ecosystem well‐being. Predicting how the water cycle responds to changes in vegetation cover remains a challenge. Recently, changes in plant transpiration across the Amazon basin were shown to be associated disproportionately with changes in rainfall, suggesting that even small declines in transpiration (e.g., from deforestation) would lead to much larger declines in rainfall. Here, constraining these findings by the law of mass conservation, we show that in a sufficiently wet atmosphere, forest transpiration can control atmospheric moisture convergence such that increased transpiration enhances atmospheric moisture import and results in water yield. Conversely, in a sufficiently dry atmosphere increased transpiration reduces atmospheric moisture convergence and water yield. This previously unrecognized dichotomy can explain the otherwise mixed observations of how water yield responds to re‐greening, as we illustrate with examples from China's Loess Plateau. Our analysis indicates that any additional precipitation recycling due to additional vegetation increases precipitation but decreases local water yield and steady‐state runoff. Therefore, in the drier regions/periods and early stages of ecological restoration, the role of vegetation can be confined to precipitation recycling, while once a wetter stage is achieved, additional vegetation enhances atmospheric moisture convergence and water yield. Recent analyses indicate that the latter regime dominates the global response of the terrestrial water cycle to re‐greening. Evaluating the transition between regimes, and recognizing the potential of vegetation for enhancing moisture convergence, are crucial for characterizing the consequences of deforestation as well as for motivating and guiding ecological restoration.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Technische Universität München

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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