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Vegetation growth responses to climate change: A cross-scale analysis of biological memory and time lags using tree ring and satellite data

  • Wenxi Tang
  • , Shuguang Liu
  • , Mengdan Jing
  • , John R. Healey
  • , Marielle N. Smith
  • , Taimoor Hassan Farooq
  • , Liangjun Zhu
  • , Shuqing Zhao
  • , Yiping Wu
  • Hainan University
  • Central South University of Forestry & Technology
  • CSUFT
  • Ministry of Natural Resources of the People's Republic of China
  • Xi'an Jiaotong University
  • Bangor University
  • National Observation and Research Station of Regional Ecological Environment Change and Comprehensive Management in the Guanzhong Plain

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

Vegetation growth is affected by past growth rates and climate variability. However, the impacts of vegetation growth carryover (VGC; biotic) and lagged climatic effects (LCE; abiotic) on tree stem radial growth may be decoupled from photosynthetic capacity, as higher photosynthesis does not always translate into greater growth. To assess the interaction of tree-species level VGC and LCE with ecosystem-scale photosynthetic processes, we utilized tree-ring width (TRW) data for three tree species: Castanopsis eyrei (CE), Castanea henryi (CH, Chinese chinquapin), and Liquidambar formosana (LF, Chinese sweet gum), along with satellite-based data on canopy greenness (EVI, enhanced vegetation index), leaf area index (LAI), and gross primary productivity (GPP). We used vector autoregressive models, impulse response functions, and forecast error variance decomposition to analyze the duration, intensity, and drivers of VGC and of LCE response to precipitation, temperature, and sunshine duration. The results showed that at the tree-species level, VGC in TRW was strongest in the first year, with an average 77% reduction in response intensity by the fourth year. VGC and LCE exhibited species-specific patterns; compared to CE and CH (diffuse-porous species), LF (ring-porous species) exhibited stronger VGC but weaker LCE. For photosynthetic capacity at the ecosystem scale (EVI, LAI, and GPP), VGC and LCE occurred within 96 days. Our study demonstrates that VGC effects play a dominant role in vegetation function and productivity, and that vegetation responses to previous growth states are decoupled from climatic variability. Additionally, we discovered the possibility for tree-ring growth to be decoupled from canopy condition. Investigating VGC and LCE of multiple indicators of vegetation growth at multiple scales has the potential to improve the accuracy of terrestrial global change models.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere17441
JournalGlobal Change Biology
Volume30
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2024

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 13 - Climate Action
    SDG 13 Climate Action
  2. SDG 15 - Life on Land
    SDG 15 Life on Land

Keywords

  • canopy condition
  • climate change
  • time-lag effect
  • tree ring
  • vegetation growth
  • vegetation growth carryover

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