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- Title
Exploring the effects of water on vegetation change and net primary productivity along the IGBP Northeast China Transect.
- Authors
Yujin Zhang; Guangsheng Zhou
- Abstract
To understand the mechanisms underlying the effects of climate variation, especially the effects of water on vegetation, vegetation type and distribution as well as climate data and soil type were used to simulate present vegetation distributions and net primary productivity (NPP) under present and future climate scenarios SRES-A2 and SRES-B2. A natural vegetation NPP model was also applied to calculate future vegetation NPP. The results showed that water played a dominant role not only in the distribution of vegetation, but also in the rate of change in the vegetation area. Analysis of NPP showed that precipitation had more effects on the amount of biome NPP than temperature did. Different effects were observed for the rate of change in NPP. In cases where biomes remain unaltered, the variation in annual precipitation could account for 39% of the variation in NPP. In cases where biomes changed, 45% of NPP was caused by temperature variation. Regarding the variation in transect production, −2.85% resulted from the change in vegetation structure when compared with present NPP, and 7.69% from the climate change under scenario SRES-B2; these values were −7.4 and 19.56%, respectively, under scenario SRES-A2. The results showed water served as a dominant factor controlling the vegetation distributions and NPP. However, temperature became determinant where the biomes changed, impacting the rate of change in vegetation NPP when the climate changed. The results also showed that water would have a positive effect on transect production, and the structure of vegetation had a negative effect under the projected future climate.
- Subjects
MANCHURIA (China); CHINA; WATER in agriculture; TRANSECT method; BIOTIC communities; AGRICULTURAL productivity
- Publication
Environmental Earth Sciences, 2011, Vol 62, Issue 7, p1481
- ISSN
1866-6280
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s12665-010-0632-1