TY - JOUR
T1 - Can Large-Scale Satellite Products Track the Effects of Atmospheric Dryness and Soil Water Deficit on Ecosystem Productivity Under Droughts?
AU - Wang, Xiaorong
AU - Guo, Zhengfei
AU - Zhang, Kun
AU - Fu, Zheng
AU - Lee, Calvin K.F.
AU - Yang, Dedi
AU - Detto, Matteo
AU - Zhang, Yongguang
AU - Wu, Jin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Oak Ridge National Laboratory and The Author(s).
PY - 2025/4/28
Y1 - 2025/4/28
N2 - Drought stress, characterized by increased vapor pressure deficit (VPD) and soil water content (SWC) deficit, significantly impacts ecosystem productivity (GPP). Accurately assessing these factors in satellite remote sensing (RS) GPP products is crucial for understanding the large-scale ecological consequences of drought. However, the accuracy of RS GPP in capturing the effects of VPD and SWC deficit, compared to EC flux data, remains under-investigated. Here we evaluated 10 RS GPP products and their mean (RSmean) concerning VPD and SWC deficit across diverse ecosystems along a dryness gradient. Our results revealed that RSmean and individual products generally capture the GPP response direction (VPD: mainly negative, SWC deficit: mixed positive/negative) but consistently misestimate the absolute GPP changes. This discrepancy is ecosystem-specific and consistent across all RS products, underscoring the need to enhance RS products to better account for ecosystem-specific VPD effects and non-linear SWC deficit responses, thereby improving RS GPP accuracy under drought.
AB - Drought stress, characterized by increased vapor pressure deficit (VPD) and soil water content (SWC) deficit, significantly impacts ecosystem productivity (GPP). Accurately assessing these factors in satellite remote sensing (RS) GPP products is crucial for understanding the large-scale ecological consequences of drought. However, the accuracy of RS GPP in capturing the effects of VPD and SWC deficit, compared to EC flux data, remains under-investigated. Here we evaluated 10 RS GPP products and their mean (RSmean) concerning VPD and SWC deficit across diverse ecosystems along a dryness gradient. Our results revealed that RSmean and individual products generally capture the GPP response direction (VPD: mainly negative, SWC deficit: mixed positive/negative) but consistently misestimate the absolute GPP changes. This discrepancy is ecosystem-specific and consistent across all RS products, underscoring the need to enhance RS products to better account for ecosystem-specific VPD effects and non-linear SWC deficit responses, thereby improving RS GPP accuracy under drought.
KW - atmospheric dryness
KW - drought stress
KW - eddy flux measurements
KW - gross primary productivity (GPP)
KW - satellite GPP products
KW - soil moisture deficit
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U2 - 10.1029/2024GL110785
DO - 10.1029/2024GL110785
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105003922075
SN - 0094-8276
VL - 52
JO - Geophysical Research Letters
JF - Geophysical Research Letters
IS - 8
M1 - e2024GL110785
ER -