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Vapour pressure deficit is the main driver of tree canopy conductance across biomes
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  • Victor Flo,
  • Jordi Martínez-Vilalta,
  • Víctor Granda,
  • Maurizio Mencuccini,
  • Rafael Poyatos
Victor Flo
CREAF, CREAF

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Jordi Martínez-Vilalta
CREAF, CREAF
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Víctor Granda
CREAF, CREAF
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Maurizio Mencuccini
CREAF, CREAF
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Rafael Poyatos
CREAF, CREAF
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Abstract

We aim to identify the relative importance of vapour pressure deficit (VPD), soil water content (SWC) and photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) as drivers of tree canopy conductance, which is a key source of uncertainty for modelling vegetation responses under climate change. We use sap flow time series of 1858 trees in 122 sites from the SAPFLUXNET global database to obtain whole-tree canopy conductance (G). The coupling, defined as the percentage of variance (R2) of G explained by the three main hydrometeorological drivers (VPD, SWC and PPFD), was evaluated using linear mixed models. For each hydrometeorological driver we assess differences in coupling among biomes, and use multiple linear regression to explain R2 by climate, soil and vegetation structure. We found that in most areas tree canopy conductance is better explained by VPD than by SWC or PPFD. We also found that sites in drylands are less coupled to all three hydrometeorological drivers than those in other biomes. Climate, soil and vegetation structure were common controls of all three hydrometeorological couplings with G, with wetter climates, fine textured soils and tall vegetation being associated to tighter coupling. Differences across sites in the hydrometeorological coupling of tree canopy conductance may affect predictions of ecosystem dynamics under future climates, and should be accounted for explicitly in models.