Abstract
The productivity of terrestrial vegetation is determined by a multitude
of drivers between the land surface and atmosphere. Water availability
is critical for vegetation productivity, but the vertical dimension of
soil moisture has been largely overlooked. Here, we analyze dominant
controls of global vegetation productivity represented by sun-induced
fluorescence and spectral vegetation indices at the half-monthly time
scale. We apply random forests to predict anomalies of vegetation
productivity from a comprehensive set of hydro-meteorological variables
including multi-layer soil moisture and quantify the variable
importance. Dominant hydro-meteorological controls generally vary with
latitudes: temperature in higher latitudes, solar radiation in lower
latitudes, and soil moisture from sub-surface layers in between. We find
that including vertically resolved soil moisture allows a better
understanding of vegetation productivity and reveals a broader
water-related control. This is found especially for semiarid regions,
illustrating the global relevance of deep(er) rooting systems as an
adaptation to water limitation.