학술논문

Tree carbon allocation explains forest drought-kill and recovery patterns.
Document Type
article
Source
Ecology letters. 21(10)
Subject
Trees
Carbon
Water
Xylem
Droughts
Forests
CO2 fertilisation
Carbon metabolism
drought
hydraulic-carbon coupling
lagged mortality
optimality theory
plant hydraulics
stem respiration
vegetation model
xylem damage
Ecology
Ecological Applications
Evolutionary Biology
Language
Abstract
The mechanisms governing tree drought mortality and recovery remain a subject of inquiry and active debate given their role in the terrestrial carbon cycle and their concomitant impact on climate change. Counter-intuitively, many trees do not die during the drought itself. Indeed, observations globally have documented that trees often grow for several years after drought before mortality. A combination of meta-analysis and tree physiological models demonstrate that optimal carbon allocation after drought explains observed patterns of delayed tree mortality and provides a predictive recovery framework. Specifically, post-drought, trees attempt to repair water transport tissue and achieve positive carbon balance through regrowing drought-damaged xylem. Furthermore, the number of years of xylem regrowth required to recover function increases with tree size, explaining why drought mortality increases with size. These results indicate that tree resilience to drought-kill may increase in the future, provided that CO2 fertilisation facilitates more rapid xylem regrowth.