TY - JOUR
T1 - Ecophysiological adjustments of a pine forest to enhance early spring activity in hot and dry climate
AU - Wang, Huanhuan
AU - Gitelson, Anatoly
AU - Sprintsin, Michael
AU - Rotenberg, Eyal
AU - Yakir, Dan
N1 - Different parts of this long-term study were funded by the Israel Science Foundation (ISF 1976/17) and the NSFC-ISF (Grant No. 2579/16), the Keren Kayemet LeIsrael (KKL 10-10-920-19), and the German Research Foundation (DFG, CliFF project, DFG-YA 274/1-1). The long-term operation of the Yatir Forest Research Field Site is supported by the Cathy Wills and Robert Lewis Program in Environmental Science. The authors thank Efrat Schwartz for assistance with lab work. We thank the Ecophysiology Group for technical support and comments on the manuscript, and the local KKL personnel for their cooperation. Author contributions - D Y and E R conceived the study and carried out the flux and sensing measurements, and H W carried out pigment analyses; A G, M S and H W analyzed the data. H W drafted the manuscript with discussions and support from all co-authors that contributed to the final manuscript.
PY - 2020/11/20
Y1 - 2020/11/20
N2 - Climate change can impose large offsets between the seasonal cycle of photosynthesis and that in solar radiation and temperature which drive it. Ecophysiological adjustments to such offsets in forests growing under hot and dry conditions are critical for maintaining carbon uptake and survival. Here, we investigate the adjustments that underlie the unusually short and intense early spring productive season, under suboptimal radiation and temperature conditions in a semi-arid pine forest. We used eddy covariance flux, meteorological, and close-range sensing measurements, together with leaf chlorophyll content over four years in a semi-arid pine forest to identify the canopy-scale ecophysiological adjustments to the short active season, and long seasonal drought. The results reveal a range of processes that intricately converge to support the early spring peak (March) in photosynthetic activity, including peaks in light use efficiency, leaf chlorophyll content, increase in the absorption of solar radiation, and high leaf scattering properties (indicating optimizing leaf orientation). These canopy-scale adjustments exploit the tradeoffs between the yet increasing temperature and solar radiation, but the concurrently rapidly diminishing soil moisture. In contrast, during the long dry stressful period with rapidly declining photosynthesis under high and potentially damaging solar radiation, physiological photoprotection was conferred by strongly relaxing the early spring adjustments. The results provide evidence for canopy-scale ecophysiological adjustments, detectable by spectral measurements, that support the survival and productivity of a pine forest under the hot and dry conditions, which may apply to large areas in the Mediterranean and other regions in the next few decades due to the current warming and drying trends.
AB - Climate change can impose large offsets between the seasonal cycle of photosynthesis and that in solar radiation and temperature which drive it. Ecophysiological adjustments to such offsets in forests growing under hot and dry conditions are critical for maintaining carbon uptake and survival. Here, we investigate the adjustments that underlie the unusually short and intense early spring productive season, under suboptimal radiation and temperature conditions in a semi-arid pine forest. We used eddy covariance flux, meteorological, and close-range sensing measurements, together with leaf chlorophyll content over four years in a semi-arid pine forest to identify the canopy-scale ecophysiological adjustments to the short active season, and long seasonal drought. The results reveal a range of processes that intricately converge to support the early spring peak (March) in photosynthetic activity, including peaks in light use efficiency, leaf chlorophyll content, increase in the absorption of solar radiation, and high leaf scattering properties (indicating optimizing leaf orientation). These canopy-scale adjustments exploit the tradeoffs between the yet increasing temperature and solar radiation, but the concurrently rapidly diminishing soil moisture. In contrast, during the long dry stressful period with rapidly declining photosynthesis under high and potentially damaging solar radiation, physiological photoprotection was conferred by strongly relaxing the early spring adjustments. The results provide evidence for canopy-scale ecophysiological adjustments, detectable by spectral measurements, that support the survival and productivity of a pine forest under the hot and dry conditions, which may apply to large areas in the Mediterranean and other regions in the next few decades due to the current warming and drying trends.
KW - Aleppo pine
KW - Monteith assumption
KW - adjustments
KW - optimum time
KW - photoprotection
KW - semi-arid forest
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85096912781&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1088/1748-9326/abc2f9
DO - 10.1088/1748-9326/abc2f9
M3 - مقالة
SN - 1748-9318
VL - 15
JO - Environmental Research Letters
JF - Environmental Research Letters
IS - 11
M1 - 114054
ER -