Vegetation, rainfall, and pulsing hydrology in the Pantanal, the world?s largest tropical wetland

被引:58
|
作者
Ivory, Sarah J. [1 ]
McGlue, Michael M. [2 ]
Spera, Stephanie [3 ]
Silva, Aguinaldo [4 ]
Bergier, Ivan [5 ]
机构
[1] Penn State Univ, Dept Geosci, University Pk, PA 16802 USA
[2] Univ Kentucky, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Lexington, KY USA
[3] Univ Richmond, Dept Geog & Environm, Richmond, VA 23173 USA
[4] Univ Fed Mato Grosso do Sul, Dept Geog, Corumba, Brazil
[5] EMBRAPA Pantanal, Corumba, Brazil
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
wetlands; climate change; ecohydrology; floods; tropical; Pantanal; ATLANTIC CONVERGENCE ZONE; TIME-SERIES; MATO-GROSSO; LAND-USE; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; SOUTH-AMERICA; VARIABILITY; INUNDATION; FOREST; BRAZIL;
D O I
10.1088/1748-9326/ab4ffe
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Wetlands provide valuable ecosystem services and play a central role in global carbon cycling. Changes in rainfall and the flood-pulse are likely to disrupt the processes that maintain these landscapes; further, landscape modification may dramatically alter wetlands and promote terrestrialization. The Pantanal, South America, is the world?s largest wetland due to flooding along the Upper Paraguay River. Predicting how water resources in the Pantanal may change is problematic due to a complex drainage network, resulting in the out-of-phase timing of rainfall and the flood pulse. We use remote sensing data of vegetation and climate to better understand the relationships among the rains, the flood pulse, and vegetation. Although rainfall is regionally synchronous, vegetation responses differ based on position relative to inundated areas. Away from rivers, vegetation greening occurs immediately following rainfall. Along channels, greening may lag rainfall by six months, responding closely to local flood stage. Interannual rainfall variability also impacts vegetation differently near flooded areas, with weaker, lagged responses to rainfall due to local water storage. This work suggests that the importance of flood pulse timing for vegetation productivity in inundated areas means that local conditions in wetlands may be the strongest controls on biogeochemical processes.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 40 条
  • [21] Vegetation structure drives mosquito community composition in UK's largest managed lowland wetland
    Smith, Daniel C.
    Schaefer, Stefanie M.
    Golding, Nick
    Nunn, Miles A.
    White, Steven M.
    Callaghan, Amanda
    Purse, Bethan V.
    PARASITES & VECTORS, 2024, 17 (01):
  • [22] Record-breaking wildfires in the world's largest continuous tropical wetland: Integrative fire management is urgently needed for both biodiversity and humans
    Garcia, Leticia Couto
    Szabo, Judit K.
    Roque, Fabio de Oliveira
    Pereira, Alexandre de Matos Martins
    da Cunha, Catia Nunes
    Damasceno-Junior, Geraldo Alves
    Morato, Ronaldo Gonsalves
    Tomas, Walfrido Moraes
    Libonati, Renata
    Ribeiro, Danilo Bandini
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2021, 293
  • [24] Neglected diversity of crop pollinators: Lessons from the world's largest tropical country
    Lopes, Ariadna Valentina
    Porto, Rafaella Guimaraes
    Cruz-Neto, Oswaldo
    Peres, Carlos A.
    Viana, Blandina Felipe
    Giannini, Tereza Cristina
    Tabarelli, Marcelo
    PERSPECTIVES IN ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION, 2021, 19 (04) : 500 - 504
  • [25] Compositional Characteristics of Fluvial Particulate Organic Matter Exported From the World's Largest Alpine Wetland
    Dai, Guohua
    Zhu, Erxiong
    Liu, Zongguang
    Wang, Yiyun
    Zhu, Shanshan
    Wang, Simin
    Ma, Tian
    Jia, Juan
    Wang, Xin
    Hou, Shengjie
    Fu, Pingqing
    Peterse, Francien
    Feng, Xiaojuan
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-BIOGEOSCIENCES, 2019, 124 (09) : 2709 - 2727
  • [26] Dissolved organic matter composition and reactivity in Lake Victoria, the world’s largest tropical lake
    Loris Deirmendjian
    Thibault Lambert
    Cedric Morana
    Steven Bouillon
    Jean-Pierre Descy
    William Okello
    Alberto V. Borges
    Biogeochemistry, 2020, 150 : 61 - 83
  • [27] Dissolved organic matter composition and reactivity in Lake Victoria, the world's largest tropical lake
    Deirmendjian, Loris
    Lambert, Thibault
    Morana, Cedric
    Bouillon, Steven
    Descy, Jean-Pierre
    Okello, William
    Borges, Alberto V.
    BIOGEOCHEMISTRY, 2020, 150 (01) : 61 - 83
  • [28] A global dataset of carbon pumping by the world's largest tropical rivers (vol 11, 382, 2024)
    Salerno, Luca
    Giulio Tonolo, Fabio
    Camporeale, Carlo
    SCIENTIFIC DATA, 2024, 11 (01)
  • [29] ICDP workshop on the Lake Victoria Drilling Project (LVDP): scientific drilling of the world's largest tropical lake
    Berke, Melissa A.
    Peppe, Daniel J.
    SCIENTIFIC DRILLING, 2024, 33 (01) : 21 - 31
  • [30] Exposing illegal hunting and wildlife depletion in the world's largest tropical country through social media data
    El Bizri, Hani
    Oliveira, Marcela
    Rampini, Aline
    Knoop, Simon
    Fa, Julia
    Coad, Lauren
    Morcatty, Thais
    Massocato, Gabriel
    Desbiez, Arnaud
    Campos-Silva, Joao
    La Laina, Daniel
    Duarte, Jose
    Barboza, Rafael
    Campos, Zilca
    da Silva, Marcelia
    Mangia, Sarah
    Ingram, Daniel
    Bogoni, Juliano
    CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 2024, 38 (05)