Impacts of hydraulic redistribution on overstory-understory interactions in a semiarid savanna
Abstract
Hydraulic redistribution (HR) is an important ecohydrological process in dryland environments by which plants preferentially move water from wet to dry soil layers. How does this water movement by the overstory influence physiological activity in the understory? Are there periods of facilitation when the tree is lifting water and periods of competition when the water is being moved deeper in the profile? We combined trunk, lateral root, and taproot sap flow data, and linked these measures with shallow and deep soil moisture data to show that soil moisture gradients control hydraulic redistribution in overstory mesquite trees. During prolonged inter-rain periods of drought and in response to periods of high vapor pressure deficits, mesquites drew upon this deeper, stored water to meet biological demands. We created plots under mesquite that experienced HR and plots where HR was physically prohibited to quantify the impacts of HR on understory performance. We measured carbon and water exchange at the leaf-level on mesquite and understory grass and for entire understory ecosystem using a large, portable chamber. We found that HR provided a drought-buffering capacity for the overstory mesquite and a significant decrease in mesquite photosynthesis in trees where the capacity for HR was reduced. While we had hypothesized that water lifted by the mesquite in periods of drought would facilitate understory grass function, we found no evidence for this. In fact, we found that grasses actually conducted higher rates of photosynthesis in plots where HR was eliminated. Ultimately, we found that HR in upland savannas, where there is little to no access to deep water, yields a competitive interaction between overstory mesquites and understory grasses at the scale of individual precipitation pulse events and across entire growing seasons.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AGUFM.H51J..01B
- Keywords:
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- 1807 Climate impacts;
- HYDROLOGYDE: 1809 Desertification;
- HYDROLOGYDE: 1813 Eco-hydrology;
- HYDROLOGYDE: 1843 Land/atmosphere interactions;
- HYDROLOGY