Summer soil drying exacerbated by earlier spring greening of northern vegetation

Xu Lian(Peking University), Shilong Piao(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Laurent Li(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Yue Li(Peking University), Chris Huntingford(UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology), Philippe Ciais(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Alessandro Cescatti(European Commission), Ivan A. Janssens(University of Antwerp), Josep Peñuelas(Centre for Research on Ecology and Forestry Applications), Wolfgang Buermann(University of California, Los Angeles), Anping Chen(Purdue University West Lafayette), Xiangyi Li(Peking University), Ranga B. Myneni(Boston University), Xuhui Wang(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Yilong Wang(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Yuting Yang(Tsinghua University), Zhenzhong Zeng(Peking University), Yongqiang Zhang(Chinese Academy of Sciences), Tim R. McVicar(Australian Research Council)
Science Advances
January 3, 2020
Cited by 482Open Access
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Abstract

Earlier vegetation greening under climate change raises evapotranspiration and thus lowers spring soil moisture, yet the extent and magnitude of this water deficit persistence into the following summer remain elusive. We provide observational evidence that increased foliage cover over the Northern Hemisphere, during 1982-2011, triggers an additional soil moisture deficit that is further carried over into summer. Climate model simulations independently support this and attribute the driving process to be larger increases in evapotranspiration than in precipitation. This extra soil drying is projected to amplify the frequency and intensity of summer heatwaves. Most feedbacks operate locally, except for a notable teleconnection where extra moisture transpired over Europe is transported to central Siberia. Model results illustrate that this teleconnection offsets Siberian soil moisture losses from local spring greening. Our results highlight that climate change adaptation planning must account for the extra summer water and heatwave stress inherited from warming-induced earlier greening.


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