Accounting for non-rainfall moisture and temperature improves litter decay model performance in a fog-dominated dryland system
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Published:2022-09-06
Issue:17
Volume:19
Page:4129-4146
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Logan J. Robert, Todd-Brown Kathe E.ORCID, Jacobson Kathryn M., Jacobson Peter J., Vogt Roland, Evans Sarah E.
Abstract
Abstract. Historically, ecosystem models have treated rainfall as
the primary moisture source driving litter decomposition. In many arid and
semi-arid lands, however, non-rainfall moisture (fog, dew, and water vapor)
plays a more important role in supporting microbial activity and carbon
turnover. To date though, we lack a robust approach for modeling the role of
non-rainfall moisture in litter decomposition. We developed a series of
simple litter decay models with different moisture sensitivity and
temperature sensitivity functions to explicitly represent the role of
non-rainfall moisture in the litter decay process. To evaluate model
performance, we conducted a 30-month litter decomposition study at 6 sites
along a fog and dew gradient in the Namib desert, spanning almost an eightfold
difference in non-rainfall moisture frequency. Litter decay rates in the
field correlated with fog and dew frequencies but not with rainfall. Including
either temperature or non-rainfall moisture sensitivity functions improved
model performance, but the combination of temperature and moisture
sensitivity together provided more realistic estimates of litter
decomposition than relying on either alone. Model performance was similar
regardless of whether we used continuous moisture sensitivity functions
based on relative humidity or a simple binary function based on the presence
of moisture, although a Gaussian temperature sensitivity outperformed a
monotonically increasing Q10 temperature function. We demonstrate that
explicitly modeling non-rainfall moisture and temperature together is
necessary to accurately capture litter decay dynamics in a fog-affected
dryland system and provide suggestions for how to incorporate non-rainfall
moisture into existing Earth system models.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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