Biodiversity and Wetting of Climate Alleviate Vegetation Vulnerability Under Compound Drought‐Hot Extremes

Author:

Zhang Gengxi1ORCID,Zhang Shuyu2,Wang Huimin1ORCID,Gan Thian Yew34ORCID,Fang Hongyuan1,Su Xiaoling5ORCID,Song Songbai5ORCID,Feng Kai6,Jiang Tianliang7,Huang Jinbai1,Xu Pengcheng1ORCID,Fu Xiaolei1

Affiliation:

1. College of Hydraulic Science and Engineering Yangzhou University Yangzhou China

2. School of Environmental Science and Engineering Southern University of Science and Technology Shenzhen China

3. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering University of Alberta Edmonton AB Canada

4. Department of Civil Environmental and Architectural Engineering University of Colorado‐Boulder Boulder CO USA

5. College of Water Resources and Architectural Engineering Northwest A & F University Yangling China

6. College of Water Conservancy North China University of Water Resources and Electric Power Zhengzhou China

7. China Institute of Water Resources and Hydropower Research Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractGlobal warming has intensified the intensity of compound drought‐hot extremes (CDHEs), posing more severe impacts on human societies and ecosystems than individual extremes. The vulnerability of global terrestrial ecosystems under CDHEs, along with its key influencing factors, remains poorly understood. Based on multiple remote sensing data, we construct a Vine Copula model to appraise vegetation vulnerability under CDHEs, and attribute it to climatic and biotic factors for five different vegetation types. High vulnerability is detected in central and southern regions of North America, eastern and southern regions of South America, Southern Africa, northern and western Europe, and northern and eastern Australia. The drier the climate, the higher will be the vulnerability. Furthermore, biodiversity and biomass are key biotic factors influencing the vulnerability of various vegetation types, such that ecosystems with richer biodiversity and higher biomass have lower vulnerability to CDHEs. The findings deepen understanding of terrestrial ecosystem response to CDHEs.

Funder

Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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