Terrestrial carbon balance in a drier world: the effects of water availability in southwestern North America

Global modeling efforts indicate semiarid regions dominate the increasing trend and interannual variation of net CO₂ exchange with the atmosphere, mainly driven by water availability. Many semiarid regions are expected to undergo climatic drying, but the impacts on net CO₂ exchange are poorly understood due to limited semiarid flux observations. Here we evaluated 121 site-years of annual eddy covariance measurements of net and gross CO₂ exchange (photosynthesis and respiration), precipitation, and evapotranspiration (ET) in 21 semiarid North American ecosystems with an observed range of 100 - 1000 mm in annual precipitation and records of 4-9 years each. In addition to evaluating spatial relationships among CO₂ and water fluxes across sites, we separately quantified site-level temporal relationships, representing sensitivity to interannual variation. Across the climatic and ecological gradient, photosynthesis showed a saturating spatial relationship to precipitation, whereas the photosynthesis-ET relationship was linear, suggesting ET was a better proxy for water available to drive CO₂ exchanges after hydrologic losses. Both photosynthesis and respiration showed similar site-level sensitivity to interannual changes in ET among the 21 ecosystems. Furthermore, these temporal relationships were not different from the spatial relationships of long-term mean CO₂ exchanges with climatic ET. Consequently, a hypothetical 100-mm change in ET, whether short term or long term, was predicted to alter net ecosystem production (NEP) by 64 gCm⁻² yr⁻¹. Most of the unexplained NEP variability was related to persistent, site-specific function, suggesting prioritization of research on slow-changing controls. Common temporal and spatial sensitivity to water availability increases our confidence that site-level responses to interannual weather can be extrapolated for prediction of CO₂ exchanges over decadal and longer timescales relevant to societal response to climate change.

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Copyright 2016 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.


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Author Biederman, J.
Scott, R.
Goulden, M.
Vargas, R.
Litvak, M.
Kolb, T.
Yepez, E.
Oechel, W.
Blanken, P.
Bell, T.
Garatuza-Payan, J.
Maurer, G.
Dore, S.
Burns, Sean
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2016-05-01T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2025-07-11T20:48:54.700445
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:18353
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Biederman, J., Scott, R., Goulden, M., Vargas, R., Litvak, M., Kolb, T., Yepez, E., Oechel, W., Blanken, P., Bell, T., Garatuza-Payan, J., Maurer, G., Dore, S., Burns, Sean. (2016). Terrestrial carbon balance in a drier world: the effects of water availability in southwestern North America. UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.org/ark:/85065/d7rf5wm5. Accessed 19 August 2025.

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