Stability of gross primary productivity and its sensitivity to climate variability in China
Xiaojuan Xu, Fusheng Jiao, Jing Liu, Jie Ma, Dayi Lin, Haibo Gong, Yue Yang, Naifeng Lin, Qian Wu, Yingying Zhu, Jie Qiu, Kun Zhang, Changxin Zou

TL;DR
This study examines how stable and sensitive plant productivity in China is to climate changes, especially in areas with multiple ecological projects.
Contribution
The study quantifies GPP stability and sensitivity in China, revealing regional differences influenced by overlapping ecological projects.
Findings
GPP showed lower stability in Eastern China and higher stability in Western and Southwest China.
Water-related factors like VPD and soil moisture significantly affect GPP in areas with multiple ecological projects.
GPP in the Loess Plateau shows a monotonic increase, high stability, and low sensitivity to climate change.
Abstract
Identifying the stability and sensitivity of land ecosystems to climate change is vital for exploring nature-based solutions. However, the underlying mechanisms governing ecosystem stability and sensitivity, especially in regions with overlapping ecological projects, remain unclear. based on Mann-Kendall, stability analysis method, and multiple regression method, this study quantified the stability and sensitivity of gross primary productivity (GPP) to climate variables [temperature, vapor pressure deficit (VPD), soil moisture, and radiation] in China from 1982 to 2019. Our findings revealed the following: (1) GPP demonstrated an increased trend with lower stability in Eastern regions, whereas a decreasing trend with higher stability was observed in Western and Southwest China. Notably, the stability of GPP was highest (74.58%) in areas with five overlapping ecological projects: Grain…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLanguage, Discourse, Communication Strategies · Linguistic Studies and Language Acquisition · Multilingual Education and Policy
