University of Wollongong
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Understorey productivity in temperate grassy woodland responds to soil water availability but not to elevated [CO2]

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-16, 03:08 authored by Luke Collins, Ross BradstockRoss Bradstock, Victor Resco de Dios, Remko Duursma, Sabrina Velasco, Mathias M Boer
Rising atmospheric [CO 2 ] and associated climate change are expected to modify primary productivity across a range of ecosystems globally. Increasing aridity is predicted to reduce grassland productivity, although rising [CO 2 ] and associated increases in plant water use efficiency may partially offset the effect of drying on growth. Difficulties arise in predicting the direction and magnitude of future changes in ecosystem productivity, due to limited field experimentation investigating climate and CO 2 interactions. We use repeat near-surface digital photography to quantify the effects of water availability and experimentally manipulated elevated [CO 2 ] (eCO 2 ) on understorey live foliage cover and biomass over three growing seasons in a temperate grassy woodland in south-eastern Australia. We hypothesised that (i) understorey herbaceous productivity is dependent upon soil water availability, and (ii) that eCO 2 will increase productivity, with greatest stimulation occurring under conditions of low water availability. Soil volumetric water content (VWC) determined foliage cover and growth rates over the length of the growing season (August to March), with low VWC ( < 0.1 m 3 m -3 ) reducing productivity. However, eCO 2 did not increase herbaceous cover and biomass over the duration of the experiment, or mitigate the effects of low water availability on understorey growth rates and cover. Our findings suggest that projected increases in aridity in temperate woodlands are likely to lead to reduced understorey productivity, with little scope for eCO 2 to offset these changes.

Funding

When fire and water mix: do carbon dioxide-related water savings drive woody plant thickening and fire dynamics in a grassy woodland? Australia's woodland landscapes have experienced widespread shrub expansion in the last century due to changes in fire, grazing and atmospheric carbon dioxide

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Collins, L., Bradstock, R. A., Resco de Dios, V., Duursma, R. A., Velasco, S. & Boer, M. M. (2018). Understorey productivity in temperate grassy woodland responds to soil water availability but not to elevated [CO2]. Global Change Biology, 24 (6), 2366-2376.

Journal title

Global Change Biology

Volume

24

Issue

6

Pagination

2366-2376

Language

English

RIS ID

122184

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