Published June 24, 2024 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Disturbance amplifies sensitivity of dryland productivity to precipitation variability

  • 1. Utah State University
  • 2. Arizona State University
  • 3. University of Montana
  • 4. United States Geological Survey

Description

Variability of the terrestrial global carbon sink is largely determined by the response of dryland productivity to annual precipitation. Despite extensive disturbance in drylands, how disturbance alters productivity-precipitation relationships remains poorly understood. Using remote-sensing to pair over 5600 km of natural gas pipeline corridors with neighboring undisturbed areas in North American drylands, we found that disturbance reduced average annual production 6-29% and caused up to a five-fold increase in the sensitivity of net primary productivity (NPP) to interannual variation in precipitation. Disturbance impacts were larger and longer-lasting at locations with higher precipitation (>450 mm mean annual precipitation). Disturbance effects on NPP dynamics were mostly explained by shifts from woody to herbaceous vegetation. Severe disturbance will amplify effects of increasing precipitation variability on NPP in drylands.

Notes

Funding provided by: United States Department of Defense
ROR ID: https://ror.org/0447fe631
Award Number: 201940

Funding provided by: Utah State University
ROR ID: https://ror.org/00h6set76
Award Number: A07339-1068

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