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Death from drought in tropical forests is triggered by hydraulics not carbon starvation

Authors :
Oliver Binks
Steel Silva Vasconcelos
Patrick Meir
David W. Galbraith
Christopher E. Doughty
John Grace
Alex A. R. Oliveira
Maurizio Mencuccini
Yadvinder Malhi
Lucy Rowland
A. C. L. da Costa
Daniel B. Metcalfe
Leandro Valle Ferreira
Rafael S. Oliveira
A.M. Pullen
Source :
Rowland, L, da Costa, A C L, Galbraith, D R, Oliveira, R S, Binks, O J, Oliveira, A A R, Pullen, A M, Doughty, C E, Metcalfe, D B, Vasconcelos, S S, Ferreira, L V, Malhi, Y, Grace, J, Mencuccini, M & Meir, P 2015, ' Death from drought in tropical forests is triggered by hydraulics not carbon starvation ', Nature, vol. 528, no. 7580, pp. 119–122 . https://doi.org/10.1038/nature15539
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Drought threatens tropical rainforests over seasonal to decadal timescales, but the drivers of tree mortality following drought remain poorly understood. It has been suggested that reduced availability of non-structural carbohydrates (NSC) critically increases mortality risk through insufficient carbon supply to metabolism ('carbon starvation'). However, little is known about how NSC stores are affected by drought, especially over the long term, and whether they are more important than hydraulic processes in determining drought-induced mortality. Using data from the world's longest-running experimental drought study in tropical rainforest (in the Brazilian Amazon), we test whether carbon starvation or deterioration of the water-conducting pathways from soil to leaf trigger tree mortality. Biomass loss from mortality in the experimentally droughted forest increased substantially after >10 years of reduced soil moisture availability. The mortality signal was dominated by the death of large trees, which were at a much greater risk of hydraulic deterioration than smaller trees. However, we find no evidence that the droughted trees suffered carbon starvation, as their NSC concentrations were similar to those of non-droughted trees, and growth rates did not decline in either living or dying trees. Our results indicate that hydraulics, rather than carbon starvation, triggers tree death from drought in tropical rainforest.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
528
Issue :
7580
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e536306d8bdb02ae997f5efd73e7e319
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature15539