蒸汽压差
天蓬
蒸腾作用
环境科学
冠层电导
生物量(生态学)
大气科学
气孔导度
雨林
树冠
含水量
生态学
水文学(农业)
生物
植物
光合作用
岩土工程
地质学
工程类
作者
Oliver Binks,Lucas A. Cernusak,Michael J. Liddell,Matt Bradford,Ingrid Coughlin,Callum Bryant,Ana Cristina Palma,Luke Hoffmann,Iftakharul Alam,Hannah Carle,Lucy Rowland,Rafael S. Oliveira,Susan G. W. Laurance,Maurizio Mencuccini,Patrick Meir
摘要
Atmospheric conditions are expected to become warmer and drier in the future, but little is known about how evaporative demand influences forest structure and function independently from soil moisture availability, and how fast-response variables (such as canopy water potential and stomatal conductance) may mediate longer-term changes in forest structure and function in response to climate change. We used two tropical rainforest sites with different temperatures and vapour pressure deficits (VPD), but nonlimiting soil water supply, to assess the impact of evaporative demand on ecophysiological function and forest structure. Common species between sites allowed us to test the extent to which species composition, relative abundance and intraspecific variability contributed to site-level differences. The highest VPD site had lower midday canopy water potentials, canopy conductance (gc ), annual transpiration, forest stature, and biomass, while the transpiration rate was less sensitive to changes in VPD; it also had different height-diameter allometry (accounting for 51% of the difference in biomass between sites) and higher plot-level wood density. Our findings suggest that increases in VPD, even in the absence of soil water limitation, influence fast-response variables, such as canopy water potentials and gc , potentially leading to longer-term changes in forest stature resulting in reductions in biomass.
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