02040nas a2200157 4500008004100000245010500041210006900146300001200215490000700227520150000234100001701734700002001751700001601771700002001787856007501807 2016 eng d00aDoes ecosystem sensitivity to precipitation at the site-level conform to regional-scale predictions?0 aDoes ecosystem sensitivity to precipitation at the sitelevel con a561-5680 v973 a
Central to understanding global C cycle dynamics is the functional relationship between precipitation and net primary production (NPP). At large spatial (regional) scales, the responsiveness of aboveground NPP (ANPP) to inter-annual variation in annual precipitation (AP; ANPPsensitivity) is inversely related to site-level ANPP, coinciding with turnover of plant communities along precipitation gradients. Within ecosystems experiencing chronic alterations in water availability, plant community change will also occur with unknown consequences for ANPPsensitivity. To examine the role plant community shifts may play in determining alterations in site-level ANPPsensitivity, we experimentally increased precipitation by ~35% for two decades in a native Central US grassland. Consistent with regional models, ANPPsensitivity decreased initially as water availability and ANPP increased. However, ANPPsensitivity shifted back to ambient levels when mesic species increased in abundance in the plant community. Similarly, in grassland sites with distinct mesic and xeric plant communities and corresponding 50% differences in ANPP, ANPPsensitivity did not differ over almost three decades. We conclude that responses in ANPPsensitivity to chronic alterations in water availability within an ecosystem may not conform to regional AP-ANPP patterns, despite expected changes in ANPP and plant communities. The result is unanticipated functional resistance to climate change at the site scale.
1 aWilcox, K.R.1 aBlair, John, M.1 aSmith, M.D.1 aKnapp, Alan, K. uhttps://esajournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1890/15-1437.1