| Literature DB >> 25339654 |
Juan J Gaitán1, Donaldo Bran2, Gabriel Oliva3, Fernando T Maestre4, Martín R Aguiar5, Esteban Jobbágy6, Gustavo Buono7, Daniela Ferrante3, Viviana Nakamatsu7, Georgina Ciari8, Jorge Salomone7, Virginia Massara7.
Abstract
Drought is an increasingly common phenomenon in drylands as a consequence of climate change. We used 311 sites across a broad range of environmental conditions in Patagonian rangelands to evaluate how drought severity and temperature (abiotic factors) and vegetation structure (biotic factors) modulate the impact of a drought event on the annual integral of normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI-I), our surrogate of ecosystem functioning. We found that NDVI-I decreases were larger with both increasing drought severity and temperature. Plant species richness (SR) and shrub cover (SC) attenuated the effects of drought on NDVI-I. Grass cover did not affect the impacts of drought on NDVI-I. Our results suggest that warming and species loss, two important imprints of global environmental change, could increase the vulnerability of Patagonian ecosystems to drought. Therefore, maintaining SR through appropriate grazing management can attenuate the adverse effects of climate change on ecosystem functioning.Entities:
Keywords: drylands; ecosystem services; grass cover
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25339654 PMCID: PMC4272212 DOI: 10.1098/rsbl.2014.0673
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Lett ISSN: 1744-9561 Impact factor: 3.703