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Hydrology and Earth System Sciences / Response of water fluxes and biomass production to climate change in permanent grassland soil ecosystems

Authors :
Forstner, Veronika
Forstner, Veronika
Groh, Jannis
Vremec, Matevz
Herndl, Markus
Vereecken, Harry
Gerke, Horst
Birk, Steffen
Pütz, Thomas
Forstner, Veronika
Forstner, Veronika
Groh, Jannis
Vremec, Matevz
Herndl, Markus
Vereecken, Harry
Gerke, Horst
Birk, Steffen
Pütz, Thomas
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Effects of climate change on the ecosystem productivity and water fluxes have been studied in various types of experiments. However, it is still largely unknown whether and how the experimental approach itself affects the results of such studies. We employed two contrasting experimental approaches, using high-precision weighable monolithic lysimeters, over a period of 4 years to identify and compare the responses of water fluxes and aboveground biomass to climate change in permanent grassland. The first, manipulative, approach is based on controlled increases of atmospheric CO2 concentration and surface temperature. The second, observational, approach uses data from a space-for-time substitution along a gradient of climatic conditions. The Budyko framework was used to identify if the soil ecosystem is energy limited or water limited. Elevated temperature reduced the amount of non-rainfall water, particularly during the growing season in both approaches. In energy-limited grassland ecosystems, elevated temperature increased the actual evapotranspiration and decreased aboveground biomass. As a consequence, elevated temperature led to decreasing seepage rates in energy-limited systems. Under water-limited conditions in dry periods, elevated temperature aggravated water stress and, thus, resulted in reduced actual evapotranspiration. The already small seepage rates of the drier soils remained almost unaffected under these conditions compared to soils under wetter conditions. Elevated atmospheric CO2 reduced both actual evapotranspiration and aboveground biomass in the manipulative experiment and, therefore, led to a clear increase and change in seasonality of seepage. As expected, the aboveground biomass productivity and ecosystem efficiency indicators of the water-limited ecosystems were negatively correlated with an increase in aridity, while the trend was unclear for the energy-limited ecosystems. In both experimental approaches, the responses of soil water fluxes an<br />Version of record

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text/html, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1366940425
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194.hess-25-6087-2021