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Pushing precipitation to the extremes in distributed experiments: recommendations for simulating wet and dry years
Authors:Alan K Knapp  Meghan L Avolio  Claus Beier  Charles J W Carroll  Scott L Collins  Jeffrey S Dukes  Lauchlan H Fraser  Robert J Griffin‐Nolan  David L Hoover  Anke Jentsch  Michael E Loik  Richard P Phillips  Alison K Post  Osvaldo E Sala  Ingrid J Slette  Laura Yahdjian  Melinda D Smith
Institution:1. Department of Biology and Graduate Degree Program in Ecology, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, USA;2. National Socio‐Environmental Synthesis Center, Annapolis, MD, USA;3. Centre for Catchments and Urban Water Research, Norwegian Institute for Water Research (NIVA), Oslo, Norway;4. Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA;5. Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, Department of Biological Sciences, Purdue Climate Change Research Center, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, USA;6. Department of Natural Resource Sciences, Thompson Rivers University, Kamloops, BC, Canada;7. US Geological Survey, Southwest Biological Science Center, Moab, UT, USA;8. Department of Disturbance Ecology, University of Bayreuth, BayCEER, Bayreuth, Germany;9. Department of Environmental Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA, USA;10. Department of Biology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA;11. School of Life Sciences and School of Sustainability, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA;12. Facultad de Agronomía, IFEVA, Universidad de Buenos Aires, CONICET, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Abstract:Intensification of the global hydrological cycle, ranging from larger individual precipitation events to more extreme multiyear droughts, has the potential to cause widespread alterations in ecosystem structure and function. With evidence that the incidence of extreme precipitation years (defined statistically from historical precipitation records) is increasing, there is a clear need to identify ecosystems that are most vulnerable to these changes and understand why some ecosystems are more sensitive to extremes than others. To date, opportunistic studies of naturally occurring extreme precipitation years, combined with results from a relatively small number of experiments, have provided limited mechanistic understanding of differences in ecosystem sensitivity, suggesting that new approaches are needed. Coordinated distributed experiments (CDEs) arrayed across multiple ecosystem types and focused on water can enhance our understanding of differential ecosystem sensitivity to precipitation extremes, but there are many design challenges to overcome (e.g., cost, comparability, standardization). Here, we evaluate contemporary experimental approaches for manipulating precipitation under field conditions to inform the design of ‘Drought‐Net’, a relatively low‐cost CDE that simulates extreme precipitation years. A common method for imposing both dry and wet years is to alter each ambient precipitation event. We endorse this approach for imposing extreme precipitation years because it simultaneously alters other precipitation characteristics (i.e., event size) consistent with natural precipitation patterns. However, we do not advocate applying identical treatment levels at all sites – a common approach to standardization in CDEs. This is because precipitation variability varies >fivefold globally resulting in a wide range of ecosystem‐specific thresholds for defining extreme precipitation years. For CDEs focused on precipitation extremes, treatments should be based on each site's past climatic characteristics. This approach, though not often used by ecologists, allows ecological responses to be directly compared across disparate ecosystems and climates, facilitating process‐level understanding of ecosystem sensitivity to precipitation extremes.
Keywords:climate extremes  drought  field experiments  precipitation regimes  wet years
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