Abstract

• Magnitude of the sub-diurnal AET - VPD hysteresis varies with biomes and climates. • Variation of the hysteresis is mostly attributable to evaporative demand limitation. • Soil moisture supply limitation amplifies the hysteresis during the dry season. • We provide some novel features to diagnose limiting mechanisms of the hysteresis. Hysteresis between sub-diurnal actual evaporation ( AET ) (or one of its components, transpiration) and vapor pressure deficit ( VPD ) at the species or individual ecosystem level has been extensively studied, but the global variation and seasonal variability of this hysteresis across biomes and climates is yet to be fully explored and the limiting mechanisms remain unclear. We hypothesize that the sub-diurnal AET - VPD hysteresis results from the interplay between evaporative demand and soil moisture supply limitations. To test our hypothesis, we quantify the sub-diurnal AET - VPD hysteresis across a broad range of biomes and climates based on the observations from the 89 FLUXNET sites (703 site-years) across the globe. We find that the magnitude of hysteresis varies with biomes and climates and is mostly attributable to evaporative demand limitation in all ten sampled biomes. In seasonally dry locations, however, low soil moisture availability amplifies the hysteresis during the dry season. Sensitivity analysis using a hydraulic model suggests that most ecosystems exhibiting seasonal drought display a more isohydric behavior during the dry season, while shift toward a more anisohydric response during the wet season. Our findings have important implications for understanding sub-diurnal dynamics between vegetation and its surrounding environment, reducing uncertainties in AET simulation at fine spatial and temporal scales, and improving understanding of the ecosystem response to hydrologic stress.

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