Photosynthetic responses to intrinsic water-use efficiency depend on
atmospheric feedbacks and modify the magnitude of response to elevated
CO2
Abstract
Plant stomata mediate the fluxes of both carbon and water between the
land and the atmosphere. The ratio between photosynthesis and stomatal
conductance (gs), or intrinsic water-use efficiency (iWUE), can be
directly inferred from leaf or tree-ring carbon isotope composition. In
many Earth system models, iWUE is inversely proportional and controlled
by a parameter (g1M) in the calculation of gs. Here we examine how iWUE
perturbations, setting g1M to the 5th (low) and 95th (high) percentile
for each plant type based on observations, influence photosynthesis
using coupled Earth System model simulations. We find that while lower
iWUE leads to reductions in photosynthesis nearly everywhere, higher
iWUE had a photosynthetic response that is surprisingly regionally
dependent. Higher iWUE increases photosynthesis in the Amazon and
central North America, but decreases photosynthesis in boreal Canada
under fixed atmospheric conditions. However, the photosynthetic response
to higher iWUE in these regions unexpectedly reverses when the
atmosphere dynamically responds due to spatially differing sensitivity
to increases in temperature and vapor pressure deficit. iWUE also
influences the photosynthetic response to atmospheric CO2, with higher
and lower iWUE modifying the total global response to elevated 2x
preindustrial CO2 by 6.4% and -9.6%, respectively. Our work
demonstrates that assumptions about iWUE in Earth system models
significantly affect photosynthesis and its response to climate.
Further, the response of photosynthesis to iWUE depends on which
components of the model are included, therefore studies of iWUE impacts
on historical or future photosynthesis can not be generalized across
model configurations.