Different roads, same destination: The shared future of plant ecophysiology and ecohydrology

Author:

Wilkening Jean V.12ORCID,Feng Xue12ORCID,Dawson Todd E.34ORCID,Thompson Sally E.56ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Civil, Environmental, and Geo‐ Engineering University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

2. St. Anthony Falls Laboratory University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

3. Integrative Biology University of California Berkeley California USA

4. Environmental Science, Policy, and Management University of California Berkeley California USA

5. Civil, Environmental, and Mining Engineering University of Western Australia Perth Western Australia Australia

6. Centre for Water and Spatial Science University of Western Australia Perth Western Australia Australia

Abstract

AbstractTerrestrial water fluxes are substantially mediated by vegetation, while the distribution, growth, health, and mortality of plants are strongly influenced by the availability of water. These interactions, playing out across multiple spatial and temporal scales, link the disciplines of plant ecophysiology and ecohydrology. Despite this connection, the disciplines have provided complementary, but largely independent, perspectives on the soil‐plant‐atmosphere continuum since their crystallization as modern scientific disciplines in the late 20th century. This review traces the development of the two disciplines, from their respective origins in engineering and ecology, their largely independent growth and maturation, and the eventual development of common conceptual and quantitative frameworks. This common ground has allowed explicit coupling of the disciplines to better understand plant function. Case studies both illuminate the limitations of the disciplines working in isolation, and reveal the exciting possibilities created by consilience between the disciplines. The histories of the two disciplines suggest opportunities for new advances will arise from sharing methodologies, working across multiple levels of complexity, and leveraging new observational technologies. Practically, these exchanges can be supported by creating shared scientific spaces. This review argues that consilience and collaboration are essential for robust and evidence‐based predictions and policy responses under global change.

Funder

University of Minnesota

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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