Authors
Sparkle L Malone, Mirela G Tulbure, Antonio J Pérez‐Luque, Timothy J Assal, Leah L Bremer, Debora P Drucker, Vicken Hillis, Sara Varela, Michael L Goulden
Publication date
2016/11
Journal
Ecosphere
Volume
7
Issue
11
Pages
e01561
Description
Drought is a global issue that is exacerbated by climate change and increasing anthropogenic water demands. The recent occurrence of drought in California provides an important opportunity to examine drought response across ecosystem classes (forests, shrublands, grasslands, and wetlands), which is essential to understand how climate influences ecosystem structure and function. We quantified ecosystem resistance to drought by comparing changes in satellite‐derived estimates of water‐use efficiency (WUE = net primary productivity [NPP]/evapotranspiration [ET]) under normal (i.e., baseline) and drought conditions (ΔWUE = WUE2014 − baseline WUE). With this method, areas with increasing WUE under drought conditions are considered more resilient than systems with declining WUE. Baseline WUE varied across California (0.08 to 3.85 g C/mm H2O) and WUE generally increased under severe drought …
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