Zhang, X., M. X. Li, Z. G. Ma, Q. Yang, M. X. Lv, and R. Clark, 2019: Assessment of an evapotranspiration deficit drought index in relation to impacts on ecosystems. Adv. Atmos. Sci., 36(11), 1273−1287, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00376-019-9061-6..
Citation: Zhang, X., M. X. Li, Z. G. Ma, Q. Yang, M. X. Lv, and R. Clark, 2019: Assessment of an evapotranspiration deficit drought index in relation to impacts on ecosystems. Adv. Atmos. Sci., 36(11), 1273−1287, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00376-019-9061-6..

Assessment of an Evapotranspiration Deficit Drought Index in Relation to Impacts on Ecosystems

  • Ecosystems have increasingly been subject to the challenge of heavy drought under global warming. To quantitatively evaluate the impacts of drought on ecosystems, it is necessary to develop a drought index that can sensitively depict the response of vegetation to drought evolution at a biological time scale. For the ability of direct connection between climate and ecosystem by deficit of evapotranspiration, in the present study, a drought index was defined based on standardized evapotranspiration deficit (SEDI), according to the difference between actual and potential evapotranspiration, to meet the need for highlighting drought impacts on ecological processes. Comparisons with traditional indices show that SEDI can reasonably detect droughts and climatic dry and wet transitions, especially at a monthly time scale, and can also regenerate long-term trends. Moreover, SEDI can more sensitively capture the biological changes of ecosystems in response to the dynamics of drought intensity, compared with the indices of precipitation and temperature. SEDI is more practical than the precipitation and temperature indices to highlight signals of biological effects in climate droughts. Hence, it has potential for use in assessments of climate change and its impact on ecosystems.
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