Abstract

AbstractDrought‐induced vegetation declines have been reported across the globe and may have widespread implications for ecosystem composition, structure, and functions. Thus, it is critical to maximizing our understanding of how vegetation has responded to recent drought extremes. To date, most drought assessments emphasized the importance of drought intensity for vegetation responses. However, drought timing, duration, and repeat exposure all may be important aspects of ecosystem response with the potential for non‐linear effects. Cumulative effects are one such phenomenon, representing the additional decline due to repeated exposure to drought, and indicating gradual loss of ecosystem resistance. This study quantifies the frequency and magnitude of cumulative effects among Australian ecosystems as they responded to the Millennium Drought. Three distinct biophysical variables derived from satellite remote sensing were analyzed, including fraction of photosynthetically absorbed radiation, photosynthetic vegetation cover, and canopy density derived from passive microwave data. Cumulative effects were detected in only 8%–20% of the fire‐free landscape exposed to repeat or long‐duration drought, and could be a statistical artifact. In those limited cases, they approximately doubled drought impacts on leaf abundance, canopy cover, and vegetation density. Cultivated lands and grasslands were the most susceptible to cumulative effects, losing resistance to recurrent droughts, but could be false discovery. Despite being relatively infrequent in forests and savannas, cumulative effects caused larger additional declines in these ecosystems. Overall, our study demonstrates that repeated exposure appears to have limited influence on the magnitude of drought impacts on canopy structure affecting only a few areas.

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