The feedback of Arizona Grassland to Longer Seasonal Droughts and its
Implication for Dryland Carbon Cycling: Insights from Model-Experiment
Integration
Abstract
Dryland play a major role in the global carbon cycle. The US Southwest
is experiencing fewer, larger precipitation events and longer dry
intervals between rainfalls. These longer droughts are likely driving
physiological, phenological, morphological, and community-level
responses of dryland vegetation with unknown feedbacks to atmospheric
CO2. It remains unclear how seasonal drought intensity
and duration affect the magnitude, duration, and direction of dryland
vegetation carbon cycling and atmospheric feedbacks. To address this
question, we integrated the measurements of soil hydrology, plant
community, and carbon fluxes from a new rainfall manipulation experiment
site (RainManSR) in the Santa Rita Experimental Range of Southeast
Arizona, US into the Community Land Model (CLM5). This field experiment
imposed four precipitation treatments (S1–S4), each with the same
summer growing season total rainfall (205 mm) but packaged into a range
of many/small to few/large rainfall events. This experiment enabled a
comprehensive evaluation and parameterization of drought tolerance of
semiarid grassland plant functional types (i.e. deep-rooted perennials
and shallow-rooted annuals) and their effects on climate extreme-carbon
cycles feedbacks. The ability of the improved CLM model to capture
dryland productivity and carbon fluxes was then validated at larger
scales with observed carbon fluxes from closeby AmeriFlux sites in the
US Southwest, such as the semi-arid Kendall grassland site (US-WKG).
Applying this model in the Arizona grassland sites indicated that high
tolerances of dryland plants to relatively low soil water potential
maintains the growing season length of the dryland ecosystem under
drought conditions, whereas the acclimation of carbon assimilation and
root dynamics to drought mitigate drought effects on vegetation
productivity and interannual variability of carbon exchange.