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The complex relationship between precipitation and productivity in drylands

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 September 2024

Lixin Wang*
Affiliation:
Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Indiana University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN 46202, USA
Scott L. Collins
Affiliation:
Department of Biology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM 87131, USA
*
Corresponding author: Lixin Wang; Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

Drylands provide multiple essential services to human society, and dryland vegetation is one of the foundations of these services. There is a paradox, however, in the vegetation productivity–precipitation relationship in drylands. Although water is the most limiting resource in these systems, a strong relationship between precipitation and productivity does not always occur. Such a paradox affects our understanding of dryland vegetation dynamics and hinders our capacity to predict dryland vegetation responses under future climates. In this perspective, we examine the possible causes of the dryland precipitation–productivity paradox. We argue that the underlying reasons depend on the location and scale of the study. Sometimes multiple factors may interact, resulting in a less significant relationship between vegetation growth and water availability. This means that when we observe a poor correlation between vegetation growth and water availability, there are potentially missing sources of water input or a lack of consideration of other important processes. The paradox could also be related to the inaccurate measurement of vegetation productivity and water availability indicators. Incorporating these complexities into predictive models will help us better understand the complex relationship between water availability and dryland ecosystem processes and improve our ability to predict how these ecosystems will respond to the multiple facets of climate change.

Topics structure

Type
Perspective
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Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press

Impact statement

Dryland vegetation plays a major role in multiple essential services provided to human society. Water is the most limiting factor for dryland vegetation growth. However, there is a paradox between dryland vegetation productivity and water availability: water is the most limiting resource in drylands, but we do not always see a strong relationship between precipitation and productivity. Such a paradox affects our understanding of dryland vegetation dynamics and hinders our capacity to predict dryland vegetation responses under future climates. In this perspective, we explore the possible causes of the dryland precipitation–productivity paradox. Understanding the causes will help us better understand the complex relationship between water availability and ecosystem processes, which can lead to improved predictions about how these globally important ecosystems will respond to the multiple facets of climate change in the future.

Introduction

Drylands are water-limited ecosystems generally defined by an aridity index (i.e., precipitation/potential evapotranspiration) less than 0.65. These ecosystems cover about 40% of the global land surface and provide multiple essential services to human society (Eldridge et al., Reference Eldridge, Bowker, Maestre, Roger, Reynolds and Whitford2011; Wang et al., Reference Wang, Jiao, MacBean, Rulli, Manzoni, Vico and D’Odorico2022). Notably, drylands support 60% of global food production (Wang et al., Reference Wang, Jiao, MacBean, Rulli, Manzoni, Vico and D’Odorico2022) and include the largest area of grazing land on earth (Maestre et al., Reference Maestre, Le Bagousse-Pinguet, Delgado-Baquerizo, Eldridge, Saiz, Berdugo, Gozalo, Ochoa, Guirado and García-Gómez2022). Because water availability is considered to be the main limiting factor for dryland vegetation growth (Wang et al., Reference Wang, Jiao, MacBean, Rulli, Manzoni, Vico and D’Odorico2022; Kannenberg et al., Reference Kannenberg, Anderegg, Barnes, Dannenberg and Knapp2024), we would expect a strong relationship between the amount of water input (e.g., precipitation) and aboveground net primary productivity (ANPP) within a site over time or for multiple sites across a water availability gradient. Indeed, there are observations ranging from the plot to ecosystem scale in which this relationship holds (Epstein et al., Reference Epstein, Pareuelo, Pińeiro, Burke, Lauenroth, D’Odorico and Porporato2006). However, there are many observations across different sites and scales where this relationship is weak or nonexistent (Fernández, Reference Fernández2007). Additionally, the precipitation–ANPP relationship is much stronger spatially than temporally (Sala et al., Reference Sala, Gherardi, Reichmann, Jobbagy and Peters2012; Knapp et al., Reference Knapp, Ciais and Smith2017). Furthermore, other studies have shown that temperature can be a more important driver of ANPP than precipitation at the mesic end of the dryland gradient (Sasaki et al., Reference Sasaki, Collins, Rudgers, Batdelger, Baasandai and Kinugasa2023). Therefore, there is a paradox in the dryland water availability–ANPP relationship: water is the most limiting resource in drylands, but we do not always see a strong relationship between water availability and productivity. The lack of a strong relationship between water input and ANPP in drylands occurs not only in observations but also in modeling. For example, Reynolds et al. (Reference Reynolds, Kemp, Ogle and Fernández2004) used a plant physiological model to simulate vegetation responses to different water inputs under a range of atmosphere and soil and plant conditions and then calculated correlations between vegetation growth and water inputs. They found these relationships to be relatively poor across the board (Reynolds et al., Reference Reynolds, Kemp, Ogle and Fernández2004). Such a paradox affects our understanding of dryland vegetation dynamics and hinders our capacity to predict dryland vegetation responses under a future, warmer climate with higher seasonal and interannual variation in precipitation. In this perspective, we explore the possible causes of the dryland water-ANPP complexities and their implications.

Methodology considerations

Uncertainties in representing dryland water availability

Precipitation versus soil water

Precipitation is the most commonly measured and widely used parameter to represent water availability in drylands. Precipitation is the major water input to terrestrial ecosystems and is straightforward to measure with a long history of field measurements globally. However, not all precipitation becomes available to plant growth due to runoff and evaporation. In fact, up to 95% of precipitation in drylands returns to the atmosphere through evapotranspiration (Wilcox and Thurow, Reference Wilcox and Thurow2006), with evaporation accounting for more than 50% of evapotranspiration in drylands (Lu et al., Reference Lu, Liang, Wang, Jenerette, McCabe and Grantz2017). As such, the concept of effective precipitation has been introduced to refer to the precipitation component that is available to plant growth. Of course, plants do not directly use precipitation for their growth but instead mostly rely on soil water. Soil moisture is therefore the second most common parameter to represent dryland water availability. There is large spatial heterogeneity of soil water status in drylands, and soil moisture also varies with depth. It is therefore a challenge to accurately capture the status of soil moisture spatially and temporally. Furthermore, water movement in the soil–plant continuum is driven by the soil water potential gradient rather than by soil water content. As such, soil water potential would be a better parameter to represent soil water availability. However, soil water potential measurements are much less common relative to soil water content across global drylands and depth-varying data are even more scarce. Recently, drought indices, such as Palmer Drought Severity Index or Standardized Precipitation Evapotranspiration Index, have been used to indicate water availability (Jiao et al., Reference Jiao, Wang, Smith, Chang, Wang and D’Odorico2021). These indices consider both water input (e.g., precipitation rather than soil water) and water demand (e.g., potential evapotranspiration) of a region, but they tend to have coarse spatial and temporal resolutions. Currently, there is no ideal indicator to represent water availability in drylands through the soil–plant–atmosphere continuum. It is important to keep these limitations in mind when examining the relationship between water availability and plant productivity using various water availability indicators.

Precipitation amount versus precipitation variability

Mean annual precipitation is often used as a surrogate for soil water availability in ecosystems. However, dryland productivity may respond not only to total precipitation but also to within-season variability in the size and frequency of rain events (Feldman et al., Reference Feldman, Feng, Felton, Konings, Knapp, Biederman and Poulter2024). In drylands, the bucket model (Knapp et al., Reference Knapp, Beier, Briske, Classen, Luo, Reichstein, Smith, Smith, Bell and Fay2008) predicts that increased precipitation variability around the same mean annual precipitation will increase productivity because fewer, larger rain events lead to deeper infiltration and longer lasting soil moisture than frequent, smaller rain events. Although short-term experiments have validated this model (Heisler-White et al., Reference Heisler-White, Blair, Kelly, Harmoney and Knapp2009), long-term experiments find model predictions to be valid in drylands only when secondary limitations (e.g., nitrogen availability) are alleviated (Brown and Collins, Reference Brown and Collins2024). Therefore, simplifying moisture inputs to annual totals will likely miss important characteristics of growing season rainfall, underestimate the role of nutrient availability and potentially weaken the relationship between water input and ANPP. Although projected changes in precipitation are still uncertain across many drylands, global warming is expected to increase precipitation variability (Thornton et al., Reference Thornton, Ericksen, Herrero and Challinor2014; Pörtner et al., Reference Pörtner, Roberts, Tignor, Poloczanska, Mintenbeck, Alegría, Craig, Langsdorf, Löschke, Möller and Rama2022), highlighting the importance of considering within-season patterns of precipitation when modeling the relationship between precipitation and ANPP (Feldman et al., Reference Feldman, Feng, Felton, Konings, Knapp, Biederman and Poulter2024).

Non-rainfall water and groundwater

Rainfall is the main source of soil water in most dryland ecosystems. However, other forms of water input to drylands include fog, dew and water vapor adsorption (Lopez-Canfin et al., Reference Lopez-Canfin, Lázaro and Sánchez-Cañete2022). These inputs could play a significant role in sustaining vegetation activities during rainless periods, and their impact could exceed rainfall in certain ecosystems (Wang et al., Reference Wang, Kaseke and Seely2017). When we quantify the relationship between vegetation productivity and water availability, typically only rainfall amount is included, and non-rainfall water inputs are rarely considered. Ignoring the potential contribution of non-rainfall water could be partially responsible for the observed weak relationship between precipitation and ANPP within a site over time.

Besides non-rainfall water sources, in some dryland regions, groundwater may also be an important source to plants. Vegetation with deep rooting systems, such as riparian trees, has the capacity to utilize deep groundwater that is unavailable to herbaceous plants (Ding et al., Reference Ding, Zhao, Daryanto, Wang, Fan and Feng2017). As such, groundwater-dependent vegetation is less subject to short-term reductions in precipitation. However, prolonged droughts could significantly impact vegetation growth if groundwater availability declines. Also, even without a change in rainfall amount, extensive human groundwater extraction will reduce groundwater levels and could directly impact vegetation growth (Brunette et al., Reference Brunette, Wang and Wassenaar2024). For such groundwater-dependent ecosystems, if only local precipitation is considered in the water input equation, the strength of the relationship between vegetation productivity and rainfall will be reduced.

Uncertainties in quantifying and representing vegetation productivity

At the plot scale, harvesting all aboveground herbaceous biomasses at the end of the growing season is considered to be the most direct and accurate way to estimate annual ANPP (Fahey and Knapp, Reference Fahey and Knapp2007). For woody plants, allometric methods are typically used to estimate the aboveground biomass (e.g., Clark et al., Reference Clark, Brown, Kicklighter, Chambers, Thomlinson and Ni2001). Because these methods indirectly incorporate the loss of productivity by grazing, browsing or senescence, they may underestimate primary production. Furthermore, these plot-scale measurements require extensive replication to capture the strong small-scale heterogeneity of dryland vegetation.

At the ecosystem scale, vegetation productivity is often estimated from eddy covariance flux tower-based CO2 measurements and is represented by gross primary production (GPP). Flux towers offer high temporal resolution measurements of GPP over relatively large ecological footprints (e.g., hundreds of meters to kilometers). Tower-based GPP measurements are usually considered to be the gold standard to benchmark and validate the carbon cycle in land surface models. However, GPP is not a directly observable variable, and it is deduced from net ecosystem exchange (NEE) measurements using different methods partitioning NEE into GPP and total ecosystem respiration (e.g., daytime partitioning vs. nighttime partitioning) and considerable biases can occur in tower-based GPP estimates (Keenan et al., Reference Keenan, Migliavacca, Papale, Baldocchi, Reichstein, Torn and Wutzler2019). Ideally, GPP can be further partitioned into net primary production (NPP) if total ecosystem respiration can be partitioned into root and heterotrophic respiration. However, this is challenging to achieve for flux tower measurements and rarely done.

At very large spatial scales, remote sensing-based estimates of biomass are often a necessity. The Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI, an estimate of “greenness”) is often used as a surrogate for vegetation productivity, but there are potential issues using NDVI to represent vegetation productivity in drylands. First, remote sensing data, especially satellite-based remote sensing data, often have a coarse spatial resolution (e.g., MODIS NDVI resolution is 500 m and Landsat NDVI is 30 m), which homogenizes local variability in vegetation production (e.g., trees, shrubs and herbaceous composition). Second, NDVI does not account for tissue loss by grazing or senescence and thus potentially underestimates vegetation production. That is why people often use peak NDVI or integrate multiple measurements over the growing season to minimize this bias. Other satellite-derived direct productivity indicators (e.g., MODIS GPP and NPP) generally perform poorly in drylands. This poor performance in drylands is related to the limited amount of dryland ground truth data used to calibrate and drive light use efficiency models (Smith et al., Reference Smith, Biederman, Scott, Moore, He, Kimball, Yan, Hudson, Barnes and MacBean2018). Our ability to constrain nearly every variable in the light use efficiency models, such as absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (APAR) by plant canopies or the efficiency at converting APAR to carbohydrates (ε), remains limited in dryland systems because of data scarcity as well as the structural and functional heterogeneities in many dryland ecosystems (e.g., sparse canopies, C3/C4 composition) (Smith et al., Reference Smith, Biederman, Scott, Moore, He, Kimball, Yan, Hudson, Barnes and MacBean2018). The use of solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) to estimate productivity has increased recently because it is directly linked to plant photosynthesis (Sun et al., Reference Sun, Gu, Wen, van der Tol, Porcar-Castell, Joiner, Chang, Magney, Wang, Hu, Rascher, Zarco-Tejada, Barrett, Lai, Han and Luo2023a, Reference Sun, Wen, Gu, Joiner, Chang, van der Tol, Porcar-Castell, Magney, Wang, Hu, Rascher, Zarco-Tejada, Barrett, Lai, Han and Luo2023b). However, currently, there are no direct SIF observations from satellites and all available satellite SIF products are from space missions that were designed to monitor atmospheric trace gasses. Satellite SIF data are therefore indirect estimates that build on a set of assumptions that are affected by a suite of factors including meteorology (Song et al., Reference Song, Wang and Wang2021). SIF measurements from towers or unmanned aerial vehicles could be one solution, but tower-based SIF measurements are still limited and lacking standardized processing and retrieval methods (Sun et al., Reference Sun, Wen, Gu, Joiner, Chang, van der Tol, Porcar-Castell, Magney, Wang, Hu, Rascher, Zarco-Tejada, Barrett, Lai, Han and Luo2023b). More importantly, it has been argued that SIF data availability and applications currently outpace the growth in the mechanistic understanding of SIF dynamics (Sun et al., Reference Sun, Gu, Wen, van der Tol, Porcar-Castell, Joiner, Chang, Magney, Wang, Hu, Rascher, Zarco-Tejada, Barrett, Lai, Han and Luo2023a).

Ecosystem process considerations

Lag effect between water input and vegetation response

Although water is the most limiting factor controlling ANPP in drylands, vegetation growth sometimes lags behind precipitation inputs both within and between years (He et al., Reference He, Li, Wang, Xie and Ye2021). During a growing season, peak rates of photosynthesis often occur several days after a rain event (e.g., Thomey et al., Reference Thomey, Collins, Friggens, Brown and Pockman2014) and depend on event size and duration of soil moisture (Vargas et al., Reference Vargas, Collins, Thomey, Johnson, Brown, Natvig and Friggens2012). This lag effect of precipitation on ANPP can be highly complex. Sala et al. (Reference Sala, Gherardi, Reichmann, Jobbagy and Peters2012) hypothesized that the effects of dry years, for example, carried over to reduce ANPP the following year despite higher precipitation inputs because of structural, biochemical or compositional changes. Indeed, using flux tower data, Petrie et al. (Reference Petrie, Peters, Yao, Blair, Burruss, Collins, Derner, Gherardi, Hendrickson and Sala2018) reported that the correlation between ANPP and precipitation in a given year was influenced by the sequence of prior conditions. For example, ANPP often increased with the length of multiyear wet periods, such that the importance of the amount of current-year precipitation declined. Others have shown that drought legacies reduce belowground bud banks and limit the capacity for vegetation to respond to increases in precipitation (Luo et al., Reference Luo, Muraina, Griffin-Nolan, Te, Qian, Yu, Zuo, Wang, Knapp, Smith, Han and Collins2023). These lagged responses obscure a strong relationship between vegetation productivity and water input rate or preclude its existence.

Nonlinear effect

Most previous studies primarily employed equation-based and linear approaches to investigate the relationship between water availability indicators (e.g., precipitation) and vegetation productivity. However, a nonlinear relationship could occur both spatially because more mesic or colder drylands are less water limited and temporally because other factors limit vegetation growth when water is plentiful (e.g., Hsu et al., Reference Hsu, Powell and Adler2012; Knapp et al., Reference Knapp, Ciais and Smith2017; Rudgers et al., Reference Rudgers, Chung, Maurer, Moore, Muldavin, Litvak and Collins2018). Based on long-term data from 48 grassland sites in Mongolia, Sasaki et al. (Reference Sasaki, Collins, Rudgers, Batdelger, Baasandai and Kinugasa2023) applied an equation-free, nonlinear time-series analysis to examine the relationship between precipitation and vegetation productivity. The results are counterintuitive in that they found that productivity responded positively to annual precipitation in mesic regions but negatively in arid regions (Sasaki et al., Reference Sasaki, Collins, Rudgers, Batdelger, Baasandai and Kinugasa2023), likely due to lagged effects. Additionally, productivity responded negatively to interannual variability in precipitation in mesic regions but positively in arid regions (Sasaki et al., Reference Sasaki, Collins, Rudgers, Batdelger, Baasandai and Kinugasa2023), as has been demonstrated elsewhere both empirically (Cleland et al., Reference Cleland, Collins, Dickson, Farrer, Gross, Gherardi, Hallett, Hobbs, Hsu and Turnbull2013; Gherardi and Sala, Reference Gherardi and Sala2019) and through modeling studies (Hou et al., Reference Hou, Litvak, Rudgers, Jiang, Collins, Pockman, Hui, Niu and Luo2021). These results indicate that the response of vegetation productivity to water availability may often be nonlinear and state dependent. Nonlinear responses, lag effects and state-dependent variables create multiple challenges for translating complex relationships into modeling frameworks that can effectively predict vegetation response to water availability under current and future climates.

Impact from non-water factors

Depending on locations and season, other meteorological factors such as temperature, relative humidity and vapor pressure deficit (VPD) could also play a role in moderating the relationship between ANPP and water availability (Novick et al., Reference Novick, Ficklin, Stoy, Williams, Bohrer, Oishi, Papuga, Blanken, Noormets, Sulman, Scott, Wang and Phillips2016; Knapp et al., Reference Knapp, Condon, Folks, Sturchio, Griffin‐Nolan, Kannenberg, Gill, Hajek, Siggers and Smith2024; Novick et al., Reference Novick, Ficklin, Grossiord, Konings, Martínez-Vilalta, Sadok, Trugman, Williams, Wright, Abatzoglou, Dannenberg, Gentine, Guan, Johnston, Lowman, Moore and McDowell2024; Wright and Collins, Reference Wright and Collins2024). For example, in the Namib Desert, vegetation growth is significantly impacted by temperature based on more than 20 years of satellite observations (Qiao and Wang, Reference Qiao and Wang2022). In this case, the temperature impact is negative, meaning that plant growth was reduced as the temperature increased, and temperature modulates the vegetation response to water availability. Given that temperature is increasing globally, but predicted changes in precipitation are spatially variable, more work is needed to address the potential interactions associated with coupled changes in both soil water and atmospheric demand across drylands. Besides meteorological factors, soil nutrients such as soil nitrogen and phosphorus availability play a significant role in affecting the relationship between ANPP and water availability in drylands (Yahdjian et al., Reference Yahdjian, Gherardi and Sala2011; Brown and Collins, Reference Brown and Collins2024). For example, low soil nitrogen constrains the vegetation response to water availability in African savanna ecosystems (Wang et al., Reference Wang, D’Odorico, Ries, Caylor and Macko2010). In addition to these physical factors, biological factors such as competition and herbivory (Maestre et al., Reference Maestre, Le Bagousse-Pinguet, Delgado-Baquerizo, Eldridge, Saiz, Berdugo, Gozalo, Ochoa, Guirado and García-Gómez2022) could further moderate the relationship between ANPP and water availability.

Conclusion and looking forward

Although water availability is considered to be the strongest limiting factor governing primary production in drylands, we do not always find a linear relationship or even a strong positive relationship between water availability and vegetation productivity within a site over time (Knapp et al., Reference Knapp, Ciais and Smith2017). This affects our capacity to predict future vegetation dynamics in drylands and to manage these ecosystems to enhance carbon sequestration. This is particularly important considering the increasing constraints on vegetation growth observed over the recent decades (Jiao et al., Reference Jiao, Wang, Smith, Chang, Wang and D’Odorico2021). The underlying reasons are numerous depending on the location and scale of a study. Sometimes multiple factors may interact, resulting in a less significant and nonlinear relationship between vegetation growth and water availability. This means that when we observe a poor correlation between vegetation growth and water availability, there are likely missing sources of water input or demand (e.g., groundwater, non-rainfall waters, VPD) or we lack consideration of other important processes, such as lag effects, within-season rainfall variability, nutrient availability or nonlinear interactions. In some cases, weaker relationships could also result from error-prone measurements (e.g., ground-level measurements) and the representation of vegetation productivity and water availability (e.g., satellite proxies). Understanding and incorporating these complexities into predictive models will be challenging, but doing so will help us better understand the complex relationship between water availability and ecosystem processes in drylands. It will also improve our ability to predict how these globally important ecosystems will respond to the multiple facets of climate change in the future.

Data availability statement

There is no data in this study.

Acknowledgements

L.W. acknowledges the support from Division of Earth Sciences of National Science Foundation (EAR‐1554894) and Division of Environmental Biology of National Science Foundation (DEB-2307257). S.L.C. was supported by DEB-1856383. The authors would also like to thank the two anonymous reviewers and the editor Dr. Laura Yahdjian whose constructive comments significantly improved the manuscript.

Author contribution

L.W.: Conceptualization, funding acquisition and writing – original draft. S.C.: Writing – review and editing, contributing additional ideas and funding acquisition.

Competing interest

The authors declare no competing interests exist.

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Author comment: The complex relationship between precipitation and productivity in drylands — R0/PR1

Comments

February 24, 2024

Dear Dr. Eldridge:

Thank you very much for the invitation to contribute to this new journal. Enclosed please find our manuscript entitled “The vegetation-water paradox in drylands” for consideration for publication in Cambridge Prisms: Drylands as a Perspective. This article has not been considered for publication elsewhere.

In this perspective, we discuss a paradox between dryland vegetation productivity and water availability: water is most limiting in drylands, but we do not always see a strong linear relationship between precipitation and productivity. Such a paradox affects our understanding of dryland vegetation dynamics and hinders our capacity to predict dryland vegetation responses under future climates. In this perspective, we explore the possible causes of the dryland precipitation-productivity paradox. Understanding the causes will help us better understand the complex relationship between water availability and ecosystem processes, which can lead to improved predictions about how these globally important ecosystems will respond to the multiple facets of climate change in the future.

Both authors have made contributions to the development of the article and have carefully read the manuscript. Please direct all correspondence to me at the address noted in the manuscript, which is also provided in this letter. Thank you for your consideration.

Respectfully,

Lixin Wang

Professor

Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences

Indiana University Indianapolis

723 W Michigan St, SL 118M

Indianapolis IN 46202

Office Tel: 317-274-7764

http://earthsciences.iupui.edu/~lxwang

Recommendation: The complex relationship between precipitation and productivity in drylands — R0/PR2

Comments

I have now received the reviews of the manuscript “The vegetation-water paradox in drylands” by Lixin Wang and Scott Collins. From this perspective, the authors explore why a strong linear relationship between precipitation and primary productivity does not always occur in drylands even when water is the one that most limits the growth of vegetation in this type of ecosystems, which they consider a paradox. The authors then explore six possible non-mutually exclusive causes of this paradox. Even when this topic has already been addressed in the literature (see for example Fernandez et 2007), this manuscript adds new perspectives to improve our understanding of dryland vegetation dynamics. However, the reviewers found critical aspects of the manuscript that should be address before recommending publication. For example, the manuscript should indicate whether the paradox applies to both gross (GPP) and net primary productivity (NPP) and provide a deeper explanation of why GPP might not be representative of NPP; add a justification of the expected linear relationship between precipitation and productivity; and add the interaction between water and other limiting resources. Additionally, it would be good to see how this perspective adds new ideas in relation to the aforementioned review. In summary, this is a nice manuscript that explores the complex relationship between water availability and ecosystem processes, and there is no doubt that the study addresses an important subject that will be of interest to the readers of Drylands. Consequently, I am willing to consider a revised version for publication if the authors can modify the manuscript according to the recommendations made by the reviewer.

Citations

Fernández, R.J. 2007. “On the frequent lack of response of plants to rainfall events in arid areas”. Journal of Arid Environments, 68: 688-691.

Decision: The complex relationship between precipitation and productivity in drylands — R0/PR3

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: The complex relationship between precipitation and productivity in drylands — R1/PR4

Comments

We thank Dr. Yahdjian for handling our manuscript and for the constructive comments. We have carefully revised the manuscript in response to the reviewers’ and editor’s comments. Please see our detailed responses to reviewers’ comments.

We provided a reply letter and track change version of the manuscript as two supplementary files.

Yours sincerely,

Lixin Wang

Recommendation: The complex relationship between precipitation and productivity in drylands — R1/PR5

Comments

This is a revised version of the Ms. “The complex relationship between precipitation and productivity in drylands” by Lixin Wang and Scott Collins. This version has addressed all the comments made by two reviewers. The main concern regarding the use of the word ¨paradox¨, the organization of the text, and the acknowledgment of the classical concepts were addressed and clarified. Furthermore, now the manuscript includes the main citations closely related to the subject of this study. In synthesis, I found this version stronger and improved. However, there are minor comments from the reviewers that should be address before I can accept this manuscript for publication in Drylands. Please provide a revised version according to the very minor comments made by the reviewer.

Decision: The complex relationship between precipitation and productivity in drylands — R1/PR6

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Author comment: The complex relationship between precipitation and productivity in drylands — R2/PR7

Comments

Dear Dr. Yahdjian,

We thank you for the additional constructive comments. We have carefully revised the manuscript in response to the reviewers’ and editor’s comments. Please see our detailed responses to reviewers’ comments which we attached as supplementary material. We also attached a tracked change version as supplementary material. Thank you!

Yours sincerely,

Lixin Wang

Recommendation: The complex relationship between precipitation and productivity in drylands — R2/PR8

Comments

Thank you for submitting a revised version of this manuscript. This version has addressed all minor comments made by reviewers in the last version. I consider that the manuscript is now ready for publication in Drylands.

Decision: The complex relationship between precipitation and productivity in drylands — R2/PR9

Comments

No accompanying comment.