Thermography captures the differential sensitivity of dryland functional types to changes in rainfall event timing and magnitude

Author:

Javadian Mostafa1ORCID,Scott Russell L.2,Biederman Joel A.2,Zhang Fangyue12,Fisher Joshua B.3,Reed Sasha C.4,Potts Daniel L.5,Villarreal Miguel L.6,Feldman Andrew F.78,Smith William K.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Natural Resources and the Environment University of Arizona Tucson AZ 85721 USA

2. Southwest Watershed Research Center USDA Agricultural Research Service Tucson AZ 85719 USA

3. Schmid College of Science and Technology Chapman University Orange CA 92866 USA

4. Southwest Biological Science Center, US Geological Survey Moab UT 84532 USA

5. Biology Department SUNY Buffalo State Buffalo NY 14222 USA

6. Western Geographic Science Center, US Geological Survey Moffett Field CA 94035 USA

7. Biospheric Sciences Laboratory NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt MD 20771 USA

8. NASA Postdoctoral Program NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt MD 20771 USA

Abstract

Summary Drylands of the southwestern United States are rapidly warming, and rainfall is becoming less frequent and more intense, with major yet poorly understood implications for ecosystem structure and function. Thermography‐based estimates of plant temperature can be integrated with air temperature to infer changes in plant physiology and response to climate change. However, very few studies have evaluated plant temperature dynamics at high spatiotemporal resolution in rainfall pulse‐driven dryland ecosystems. We address this gap by incorporating high‐frequency thermal imaging into a field‐based precipitation manipulation experiment in a semi‐arid grassland to investigate the impacts of rainfall temporal repackaging. All other factors held constant, we found that fewer/larger precipitation events led to cooler plant temperatures (1.4°C) compared to that of many/smaller precipitation events. Perennials, in particular, were 2.5°C cooler than annuals under the fewest/largest treatment. We show these patterns were driven by: increased and consistent soil moisture availability in the deeper soil layers in the fewest/largest treatment; and deeper roots of perennials providing access to deeper plant available water. Our findings highlight the potential for high spatiotemporal resolution thermography to quantify the differential sensitivity of plant functional groups to soil water availability. Detecting these sensitivities is vital to understanding the ecohydrological implications of hydroclimate change.

Funder

U.S. Department of Agriculture

U.S. Geological Survey

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Plant Science,Physiology

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