Increased atmospheric vapor pressure deficit reduces global vegetation growth.
Wenping YuanYi ZhengShilong PiaoPhilippe CiaisDanica L LombardozziYing-Ping WangYoungryel RyuGuixing ChenWenjie DongZhongming HuAtul K JainChongya JiangEtsushi KatoShihua LiSebastian LienertShuguang LiuJulia E M S NabelZhangcai QinTimothy A QuineStephen SitchWilliam Kolby SmithFan WangChaoyang WuZhiqiang XiaoSong YangPublished in: Science advances (2019)
Atmospheric vapor pressure deficit (VPD) is a critical variable in determining plant photosynthesis. Synthesis of four global climate datasets reveals a sharp increase of VPD after the late 1990s. In response, the vegetation greening trend indicated by a satellite-derived vegetation index (GIMMS3g), which was evident before the late 1990s, was subsequently stalled or reversed. Terrestrial gross primary production derived from two satellite-based models (revised EC-LUE and MODIS) exhibits persistent and widespread decreases after the late 1990s due to increased VPD, which offset the positive CO2 fertilization effect. Six Earth system models have consistently projected continuous increases of VPD throughout the current century. Our results highlight that the impacts of VPD on vegetation growth should be adequately considered to assess ecosystem responses to future climate conditions.