| Literature DB >> 32892732 |
Alexander Graf1, Anne Klosterhalfen1,2, Nicola Arriga3, Christian Bernhofer4, Heye Bogena1, Frédéric Bornet5, Nicolas Brüggemann1, Christian Brümmer6, Nina Buchmann7, Jinshu Chi2, Christophe Chipeaux8, Edoardo Cremonese9, Matthias Cuntz10, Jiří Dušek11, Tarek S El-Madany12, Silvano Fares13, Milan Fischer11, Lenka Foltýnová11, Mana Gharun7, Shiva Ghiasi7, Bert Gielen14, Pia Gottschalk15, Thomas Grünwald4, Günther Heinemann16, Bernard Heinesch17, Michal Heliasz18, Jutta Holst18, Lukas Hörtnagl7, Andreas Ibrom19, Joachim Ingwersen20, Gerald Jurasinski21, Janina Klatt22, Alexander Knohl23, Franziska Koebsch21, Jan Konopka24, Mika Korkiakoski25, Natalia Kowalska11, Pascal Kremer20, Bart Kruijt26, Sebastien Lafont8, Joël Léonard5, Anne De Ligne17, Bernard Longdoz17, Denis Loustau8, Vincenzo Magliulo27, Ivan Mammarella28, Giovanni Manca3, Matthias Mauder22, Mirco Migliavacca12, Meelis Mölder18, Johan Neirynck29, Patrizia Ney1, Mats Nilsson2, Eugénie Paul-Limoges30, Matthias Peichl2, Andrea Pitacco31, Arne Poyda20,32, Corinna Rebmann33, Marilyn Roland14, Torsten Sachs15, Marius Schmidt1, Frederik Schrader6, Lukas Siebicke23, Ladislav Šigut11, Eeva-Stiina Tuittila34, Andrej Varlagin35, Nadia Vendrame31, Caroline Vincke36, Ingo Völksch22, Stephan Weber24, Christian Wille15, Hans-Dieter Wizemann37, Matthias Zeeman22, Harry Vereecken1.
Abstract
Drought and heat events, such as the 2018 European drought, interact with the exchange of energy between the land surface and the atmosphere, potentially affecting albedo, sensible and latent heat fluxes, as well as CO2 exchange. Each of these quantities may aggravate or mitigate the drought, heat, their side effects on productivity, water scarcity and global warming. We used measurements of 56 eddy covariance sites across Europe to examine the response of fluxes to extreme drought prevailing most of the year 2018 and how the response differed across various ecosystem types (forests, grasslands, croplands and peatlands). Each component of the surface radiation and energy balance observed in 2018 was compared to available data per site during a reference period 2004-2017. Based on anomalies in precipitation and reference evapotranspiration, we classified 46 sites as drought affected. These received on average 9% more solar radiation and released 32% more sensible heat to the atmosphere compared to the mean of the reference period. In general, drought decreased net CO2 uptake by 17.8%, but did not significantly change net evapotranspiration. The response of these fluxes differed characteristically between ecosystems; in particular, the general increase in the evaporative index was strongest in peatlands and weakest in croplands. This article is part of the theme issue 'Impacts of the 2018 severe drought and heatwave in Europe: from site to continental scale'.Entities:
Keywords: eddy covariance; energy balance; evapotranspiration; heat flux; net carbon uptake; water-use efficiency
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32892732 PMCID: PMC7485107 DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2019.0524
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8436 Impact factor: 6.237