Forest ecosystem response to weather extremes: case study of a montane
mixed forest in Switzerland
Abstract
Extreme environmental events have become a major interest of ecologists.
Commonly, extreme climatic events are identified based on “changes in
the mean conditions” over a discrete period with respect to the
longer-term climatology. In this study we aim to: 1) define a different
type of extreme event, i.e. weather extreme events: an event with
extreme deviation from an expected value (calculated based on past
weather conditions) and 2) quantify ecosystem resistance, recovery, and
resilience in response to these shock events based on changes in net
ecosystem productivity (NEP) measured over 16 years (2004 – 2019), in a
montane mixed forest in Switzerland (CH-LAE, Lägeren). In addition to
the identification of the physiological extreme events, we test the
hypothesis that extremes associated with continuously varying
environmental conditions can modify the physiological functionality of a
forest ecosystem. We calculated weather extreme;based on half-hourly
measurements of atmospheric water demand (i.e. vapor pressure deficit,
VPD) measured alongside eddy covariance flux measurements. Between 2004
and 2019, we found 185 such physiological extreme events
(VPD-extreme), ranging from one to seven days, that occurred about 27 %
in spring and 68 % in summer. On average NEP decreased by 25% during
these VPD-extreme days compared to the normal-VPD day before, resulting
in mean resistance (NEPextreme/NEPpre-extreme) of 0.75. Mean recovery
(NEPpost-extreme/NEEextreme) was about 0.85, indicating about a 15%
decrease in NEP on days after the extreme events compared to before.
There was no significant trend in resistance, recovery, and resilience
over the 16 years. Finally, decreased functionality during these
VPD-extreme days events confirms our hypothesis. Our approach of looking
at the forest response to extreme events is independent of “changes of
mean conditions from long-term climatology” and focuses on the ability
of the ecosystem to maintain functionality within the realm of
“continuous environmental variability”. Identification of
physiologically-relevant climatic extremes and testing the legacy effect
from those events is a crucial requirement for understanding the future
response of forests to climate change.