Rainfall Variability and Carbon Cycling in Semi-Arid Ecosystems

Shifting patterns of precipitation associated with climate change may affect water-limited ecosystems to a greater degree than atmospheric CO2 or temperature changes, yet we lack a mechanistic understanding of the effects of water in these ecosystems. In water-limited ecosystems, annual net primar...

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Main Author: Potts, Daniel Lawrence
Other Authors: Huxman, Travis E.
Language:en
Published: The University of Arizona. 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194366
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spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1943662015-10-23T04:40:55Z Rainfall Variability and Carbon Cycling in Semi-Arid Ecosystems Potts, Daniel Lawrence Huxman, Travis E. McPherson, Guy R. Shuttleworth, W. James Archer, Steven R. Santa Rita Experimental Range San Pedro River mesquite invasive species precipitation Shifting patterns of precipitation associated with climate change may affect water-limited ecosystems to a greater degree than atmospheric CO2 or temperature changes, yet we lack a mechanistic understanding of the effects of water in these ecosystems. In water-limited ecosystems, annual net primary productivity correlates strongly with total annual precipitation. However, precipitation in these ecosystems arrives in episodic events, suggesting that biophysical investigations should focus on the implications of discrete precipitation events. Further, examining dynamics of ecosystem processes over a period of days or weeks promises to link our leaf-level mechanistic understandings with larger scale patterns and temporal dynamics of ecosystem photosynthetic CO2 uptake, respiration and evapotranspiration.The objectives of this dissertation were to quantify: (1) the influence of biotic and abiotic features of an ecosystem (e.g., species composition and soil physical characteristics) on short-term patterns of resilience and resistance to a precipitation pulse; (2) the role of antecedent climatic conditions and the seasonal timing of rainfall in limiting ecosystem carbon exchange in response to precipitation events; and (3) the effect of changes in woody plant abundance on seasonal ecosystem carbon dynamics in relation to the North American Monsoon.Major findings and contributions of this research include defining the concepts of ecosystem functional resistance and resilience and their implications in the presence of a dominant nonnative bunchgrass in semi-arid grasslands (Appendix A); a better understanding of the influence of warm-season precipitation variability and the seasonal timing of rainfall on ecosystem carbon dynamics in a semi-arid grassland (Appendix B); the use of flux duration analysis, a novel approach to analyzing ecosystem carbon and water flux time-series data to distinguish between "pulse-driven" or "steady-state" ecosystems (Appendix C); and, finally, the application of flux duration analysis to quantify the sensitivity of ecosystem carbon exchange in response to seasonal rainfall in a riparian grassland and shrubland and the role that plant functional type diversity may play in constraining carbon exchange sensitivity (Appendix D). 2005 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194366 137355107 1338 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Santa Rita Experimental Range
San Pedro River
mesquite
invasive species
precipitation
spellingShingle Santa Rita Experimental Range
San Pedro River
mesquite
invasive species
precipitation
Potts, Daniel Lawrence
Rainfall Variability and Carbon Cycling in Semi-Arid Ecosystems
description Shifting patterns of precipitation associated with climate change may affect water-limited ecosystems to a greater degree than atmospheric CO2 or temperature changes, yet we lack a mechanistic understanding of the effects of water in these ecosystems. In water-limited ecosystems, annual net primary productivity correlates strongly with total annual precipitation. However, precipitation in these ecosystems arrives in episodic events, suggesting that biophysical investigations should focus on the implications of discrete precipitation events. Further, examining dynamics of ecosystem processes over a period of days or weeks promises to link our leaf-level mechanistic understandings with larger scale patterns and temporal dynamics of ecosystem photosynthetic CO2 uptake, respiration and evapotranspiration.The objectives of this dissertation were to quantify: (1) the influence of biotic and abiotic features of an ecosystem (e.g., species composition and soil physical characteristics) on short-term patterns of resilience and resistance to a precipitation pulse; (2) the role of antecedent climatic conditions and the seasonal timing of rainfall in limiting ecosystem carbon exchange in response to precipitation events; and (3) the effect of changes in woody plant abundance on seasonal ecosystem carbon dynamics in relation to the North American Monsoon.Major findings and contributions of this research include defining the concepts of ecosystem functional resistance and resilience and their implications in the presence of a dominant nonnative bunchgrass in semi-arid grasslands (Appendix A); a better understanding of the influence of warm-season precipitation variability and the seasonal timing of rainfall on ecosystem carbon dynamics in a semi-arid grassland (Appendix B); the use of flux duration analysis, a novel approach to analyzing ecosystem carbon and water flux time-series data to distinguish between "pulse-driven" or "steady-state" ecosystems (Appendix C); and, finally, the application of flux duration analysis to quantify the sensitivity of ecosystem carbon exchange in response to seasonal rainfall in a riparian grassland and shrubland and the role that plant functional type diversity may play in constraining carbon exchange sensitivity (Appendix D).
author2 Huxman, Travis E.
author_facet Huxman, Travis E.
Potts, Daniel Lawrence
author Potts, Daniel Lawrence
author_sort Potts, Daniel Lawrence
title Rainfall Variability and Carbon Cycling in Semi-Arid Ecosystems
title_short Rainfall Variability and Carbon Cycling in Semi-Arid Ecosystems
title_full Rainfall Variability and Carbon Cycling in Semi-Arid Ecosystems
title_fullStr Rainfall Variability and Carbon Cycling in Semi-Arid Ecosystems
title_full_unstemmed Rainfall Variability and Carbon Cycling in Semi-Arid Ecosystems
title_sort rainfall variability and carbon cycling in semi-arid ecosystems
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/194366
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