Journal article
An ecoclimatic framework for evaluating the resilience of vegetation to water deficit
PJ Mitchell, AP O'Grady, EA Pinkard, TJ Brodribb, SK Arndt, CJ Blackman, RA Duursma, RJ Fensham, DW Hilbert, CR Nitschke, J Norris, SH Roxburgh, KX Ruthrof, DT Tissue
Global Change Biology | Published : 2016
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13177
Abstract
The surge in global efforts to understand the causes and consequences of drought on forest ecosystems has tended to focus on specific impacts such as mortality. We propose an ecoclimatic framework that takes a broader view of the ecological relevance of water deficits, linking elements of exposure and resilience to cumulative impacts on a range of ecosystem processes. This ecoclimatic framework is underpinned by two hypotheses: (i) exposure to water deficit can be represented probabilistically and used to estimate exposure thresholds across different vegetation types or ecosystems; and (ii) the cumulative impact of a series of water deficit events is defined by attributes governing the resis..
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Funding Acknowledgements
This paper was produced from an Australian Centre for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (ACEAS) working group on forest drought and mortality, funded through the Australian Government's Terrestrial Environmental Research Network (TERN).