Global vegetation resilience linked to water availability and variability

Taylor Smith, Niklas Boers

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

54 Scopus citations

Abstract

Quantifying the resilience of vegetated ecosystems is key to constraining both present-day and future global impacts of anthropogenic climate change. Here we apply both empirical and theoretical resilience metrics to remotely-sensed vegetation data in order to examine the role of water availability and variability in controlling vegetation resilience at the global scale. We find a concise global relationship where vegetation resilience is greater in regions with higher water availability. We also reveal that resilience is lower in regions with more pronounced inter-annual precipitation variability, but find less concise relationships between vegetation resilience and intra-annual precipitation variability. Our results thus imply that the resilience of vegetation responds differently to water deficits at varying time scales. In view of projected increases in precipitation variability, our findings highlight the risk of ecosystem degradation under ongoing climate change.

Original languageEnglish
Article number498
JournalNature Communications
Volume14
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2023

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