Future climate doubles the risk of hydraulic failure in a wet tropical forest

Author:

Robbins Zachary1ORCID,Chambers Jeffrey2,Chitra‐Tarak Rutuja1ORCID,Christoffersen Bradley3ORCID,Dickman L. Turin1ORCID,Fisher Rosie4ORCID,Jonko Alex1ORCID,Knox Ryan2ORCID,Koven Charles2ORCID,Kueppers Lara2ORCID,McDowell Nate5ORCID,Xu Chonggang1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Earth & Environmental Sciences Division Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545 USA

2. Climate and Ecosystem Sciences Division Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Berkeley CA 94720 USA

3. School of Integrative Biological and Chemical Sciences University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Edinburg TX 78539 USA

4. CICERO Center for International Climate Research Postboks 1129 Blindern 0318 Oslo Norway

5. Atmospheric Sciences & Global Change Division Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Richland WA 99354 USA

Abstract

Summary Future climate presents conflicting implications for forest biomass. We evaluate how plant hydraulic traits, elevated CO2 levels, warming, and changes in precipitation affect forest primary productivity, evapotranspiration, and the risk of hydraulic failure. We used a dynamic vegetation model with plant hydrodynamics (FATES‐HYDRO) to simulate the stand‐level responses to future climate changes in a wet tropical forest in Barro Colorado Island, Panama. We calibrated the model by selecting plant trait assemblages that performed well against observations. These assemblages were run with temperature and precipitation changes for two greenhouse gas emission scenarios (2086–2100: SSP2‐45, SSP5‐85) and two CO2 levels (contemporary, anticipated). The risk of hydraulic failure is projected to increase from a contemporary rate of 5.7% to 10.1–11.3% under future climate scenarios, and, crucially, elevated CO2 provided only slight amelioration. By contrast, elevated CO2 mitigated GPP reductions. We attribute a greater variation in hydraulic failure risk to trait assemblages than to either CO2 or climate. Our results project forests with both faster growth (through productivity increases) and higher mortality rates (through increasing rates of hydraulic failure) in the neo‐tropics accompanied by certain trait plant assemblages becoming nonviable.

Funder

Biological and Environmental Research

Publisher

Wiley

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