植被(病理学)
热带
环境科学
反照率(炼金术)
温带气候
热带植被
热带稀树草原气候
干旱
大气科学
气候学
热带气候
亚热带
生态系统
生态学
地质学
艺术
病理
生物
医学
艺术史
表演艺术
作者
Andrew F. Feldman,Daniel J. Short Gianotti,Jianzhi Dong,Isabel F. Trigo,Guido D. Salvucci,Dara Entekhabi
摘要
Vegetation cover creates competing effects on land surface temperature: it typically cools through enhancing energy dissipation and warms via decreasing surface albedo. Global vegetation has been previously found to overall net cool land surfaces with cooling contributions from temperate and tropical vegetation and warming contributions from boreal vegetation. Recent studies suggest that dryland vegetation across the tropics strongly contributes to this global net cooling feedback. However, observation-based vegetation-temperature interaction studies have been limited in the tropics, especially in their widespread drylands. Theoretical considerations also call into question the ability of dryland vegetation to strongly cool the surface under low water availability. Here, we use satellite observations to investigate how tropical vegetation cover influences the surface energy balance. We find that while increased vegetation cover would impart net cooling feedbacks across the tropics, net vegetal cooling effects are subdued in drylands. Using observations, we determine that dryland plants have less ability to cool the surface due to their cooling pathways being reduced by aridity, overall less efficient dissipation of turbulent energy, and their tendency to strongly increase solar radiation absorption. As a result, while proportional greening across the tropics would create an overall biophysical cooling feedback, dryland tropical vegetation reduces the overall tropical surface cooling magnitude by at least 14%, instead of enhancing cooling as suggested by previous global studies.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI