Enhanced dominance of soil moisture stress on vegetation growth in Eurasian drylands

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Documents

  • Fulltext

    Final published version, 3.18 MB, PDF document

  • Yu Zhang
  • Yangjian Zhang
  • Xu Lian
  • Zhoutao Zheng
  • Guang Zhao
  • Tao Zhang
  • Minjie Xu
  • Huang, Ke
  • Ning Chen
  • Ji Li
  • Shilong Piao
Despite the mounting attention being paid to vegetation growth and their driving forces for water-limited ecosystems, the relative contributions of atmospheric and soil moisture dryness stress on vegetation growth are an ongoing debate. Here we comprehensively compare the impacts of high vapor pressure deficit (VPD) and low soil water content (SWC) on vegetation growth in Eurasian drylands during 1982–2014. The analysis indicates a gradual decoupling between atmospheric dryness and soil dryness over this period, as the former has expanded faster than the latter. Moreover, the VPD–SWC relation and VPD–greenness relation are both non-linear, while the SWC–greenness relation is near-linear. The loosened coupling between VPD and SWC, the non-linear correlations among VPD–SWC-greenness and the expanded area extent in which SWC acts as the dominant stress factor all provide compelling evidence that SWC is a more influential stressor than VPD on vegetation growth in Eurasian drylands. In addition, a set of 11 Earth system models projected a continuously growing constraint of SWC stress on vegetation growth towards 2100. Our results are vital to dryland ecosystems management and drought mitigation in Eurasia.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbernwad108
JournalNational Science Review
Volume10
Issue number8
Number of pages13
ISSN2095-5138
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

ID: 357520977