Abstract

Terrestrial net primary productivity (NPP) plays an essential role in the global carbon cycle as well as for climate change. However, in the past three decades, terrestrial ecosystems across mainland China suffered from frequent drought and, to date, the adverse impacts on NPP remain uncertain. This study explored the spatiotemporal features of NPP and discussed the influences of drought on NPP across mainland China from 1982 to 2015 using the Carnegie Ames Stanford Application (CASA) model and the standardized precipitation evapotranspiration index (SPEI). The obtained results indicate that: (1) The total annual NPP across mainland China showed an non-significantly increasing trend from 1982 to 2015, with annual increase of 0.025 Pg C; the spring NPP exhibited a significant increasing trend (0.031 Pg C year−1, p < 0.05) while the summer NPP showed a higher decreasing trend (0.019 Pg C year−1). (2) Most areas of mainland China were spatially dominated by a positive correlation between annual NPP and SPEI and a significant positive correlation was mainly observed for Northern China; specific to the nine sub-regions, annual NPP and SPEI shared similar temporal patterns with a significant positive relation in Northeastern China, Huang-Huai-Hai, Inner Mongolia, and the Gan-Xin Region. (3) During the five typical drought events, more than 23% areas of mainland China experienced drought ravage; the drought events generally caused about 30% of the NPP reduction in most of the sub-regions while the NPP in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau Region generally decreased by about 10%.

Highlights

  • With their vast land area and diverse ecosystems, global terrestrial ecosystems are functioning as large biological carbon sequestration bodies that partly offset fossil fuel emissions [1,2]

  • The mean annual net primary productivity (NPP) showed decreasing gradients from the southeast to the northwest, which is generally consistent with the reports the NPP of evergreen broadleaf forest (EBF) and deciduous broadleaf forest (DBF) in this study are generally lower than other researches

  • NPP Trends Related to Climate Variation In this study, an increase of total annual NPP was observed across mainland China from 1982 to

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Summary

Introduction

With their vast land area and diverse ecosystems, global terrestrial ecosystems are functioning as large biological carbon sequestration bodies that partly offset fossil fuel emissions [1,2]. Terrestrial net primary productivity (NPP) is an indicator for the accumulation of atmospheric CO2 in terrestrial ecosystems and plays an essential role for the global carbon cycle as well as for climate change [8,9,10]. This index has been suggested as an integrative measure of ecosystem function, and it is a key variable for evaluating the effects of droughts on ecosystem conditions [11,12]. The exploration of the NPP response to drought disturbances presents significance for the understanding of the effects of climate change on regional/global carbon cycling

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