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(2005) Grassland productivity in an alpine environment in response to climate change

Authors
Zha Y. , Gao J. , Zhang Y.
Source
Area (2)
Type
P - Paper (2851)
Peer Review
2 - Medium (2288)
Audience
S - Specialist (3514)
Pages
332-340
Journal Number
37
Notes

Abstract
Situated in a climatically stressful environment, alpine grassland is sensitive to subtle climate changes in its productivity. We remedy the current deficiency in studying grassland productivity by taking the integrated effect of all relevant factors into consideration. The relative importance of temperature, rainfall and evaporation to the alpine grassland productivity in western China was determined through analysis of their relationship with the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) between 1981 and 2000. Climate warming stimulated grassland productivity in the 1980s, but hampered it in the 1990s. Temperature is more important than rainfall to grassland productivity early in the growing season. However, their relative importance is reversed late in the growing season. Monthly summer month rainfall modified by maximum monthly temperature is a good predictor of alpine grassland productivity at 62.0 per cent. However, the best predictor is water deficiency, which is able to improve the estimation accuracy to 78.3 per cent. Hence, the impact of temperature on grassland productivity is better studied indirectly through evaporation.

World_link Resources online

Folder Categories
Temperature Evapotranspiration Grasslands Plants
 
Tag_blue Keywords
Western China grassland productivity climate change NDVI Alpine environment
 
Map Countries
China
 
Map Regions
Asia
 

Entered by: Elaine Brown, 5/2010

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