Abstract

Abstract. As a result of climate change warmer temperatures are projected through the 21st century and are already increasing above modelled predictions. Apart from increases in the mean, warm/hot temperature extremes are expected to become more prevalent in the future, along with an increase in the frequency of droughts. It is crucial to better understand the response of terrestrial ecosystems to such temperature extremes for predicting land-surface feedbacks in a changing climate. While land-surface feedbacks in drought conditions and during heat waves have been reported from Europe and the US, direct observations of the impact of such extremes on the carbon and water cycles in Australia have been lacking. During the 2012/2013 summer, Australia experienced a record-breaking heat wave with an exceptional spatial extent that lasted for several weeks. In this study we synthesised eddy-covariance measurements from seven woodlands and one forest site across three biogeographic regions in southern Australia. These observations were combined with model results from BIOS2 (Haverd et al., 2013a, b) to investigate the effect of the summer heat wave on the carbon and water exchange of terrestrial ecosystems which are known for their resilience toward hot and dry conditions. We found that water-limited woodland and energy-limited forest ecosystems responded differently to the heat wave. During the most intense part of the heat wave, the woodlands experienced decreased latent heat flux (23 % of background value), increased Bowen ratio (154 %) and reduced carbon uptake (60 %). At the same time the forest ecosystem showed increased latent heat flux (151 %), reduced Bowen ratio (19 %) and increased carbon uptake (112 %). Higher temperatures caused increased ecosystem respiration at all sites (up to 139 %). During daytime all ecosystems remained carbon sinks, but carbon uptake was reduced in magnitude. The number of hours during which the ecosystem acted as a carbon sink was also reduced, which switched the woodlands into a carbon source on a daily average. Precipitation occurred after the first, most intense part of the heat wave, and the subsequent cooler temperatures in the temperate woodlands led to recovery of the carbon sink, decreased the Bowen ratio (65 %) and hence increased evaporative cooling. Gross primary productivity in the woodlands recovered quickly with precipitation and cooler temperatures but respiration remained high. While the forest proved relatively resilient to this short-term heat extreme the response of the woodlands is the first direct evidence that the carbon sinks of large areas of Australia may not be sustainable in a future climate with an increased number, intensity and duration of heat waves.

Highlights

  • Average temperatures in Australia have increased by 0.9 ◦C since 1910 (CSIRO and BOM, 2014), which represents the most extreme of modeling scenarios, and even further warming is projected with climate change (IPCC, 2013)

  • The heat wave event commenced on 25 December 2012 with a build-up of extreme heat in the southwest of Western Australia

  • Temporary cooling was observed in the eastern states after 8 January, but a second high pressure system moved into the bight in the meantime, starting a second wave of record-breaking heat across the continent

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Summary

Introduction

Average temperatures in Australia have increased by 0.9 ◦C since 1910 (CSIRO and BOM, 2014), which represents the most extreme of modeling scenarios, and even further warming is projected with climate change (IPCC, 2013). Extreme heat and drought often co-occur (King et al, 2014), and soil water limitations can exacerbate the intensity of heat waves (Fischer et al, 2007; Seneviratne et al, 2010) due to reduced evaporative cooling and increased sensible heat flux (Sheffield et al, 2012). This combination of reduced water availability and increased evaporative demand places increased stress on terrestrial ecosystems. On the Western Australian south coast, the maximum temperature record was broken in Eucla on 3 January with 48.2 ◦C. Besides being the hottest year since 1910, summer 2012/2013 was considerably drier than average in most parts of the continent, but in the densely populated east of Australia. King et al (2014) have shown that extreme heat was made much more likely by contributions from the very dry conditions over the inland eastern region of Australia as well as by anthropogenic warming

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