Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 6 de 6
Filtrar
Más filtros











Base de datos
Intervalo de año de publicación
1.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 4781, 2020 Sep 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32963258

RESUMEN

As photovoltaic power is expanding rapidly worldwide, it is imperative to assess its promise under future climate scenarios. While a great deal of research has been devoted to trends in mean solar radiation, less attention has been paid to its intermittent character, a key challenge when compounded with uncertainties related to climate variability. Using both satellite data and climate model outputs, we characterize solar radiation intermittency to assess future photovoltaic reliability. We find that the relation between the future power supply and long-term mean solar radiation trends is spatially heterogeneous, showing power reliability is more sensitive to the fluctuations of mean solar radiation in hot arid regions. Our results highlight how reliability analysis must account simultaneously for the mean and intermittency of solar inputs when assessing the impacts of climate change on photovoltaics.

2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(30): 17635-17642, 2020 07 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32651272

RESUMEN

Soil-salinization affects, to a different extent, more than one-third of terrestrial river basins (estimate based on the Food and Agriculture Organization Harmonized World Soil Database, 2012). Among these, many are endorheic and ephemeral systems already encompassing different degrees of aridity, land degradation, and vulnerability to climate change. The primary effect of salinization is to limit plant water uptake and evapotranspiration, thereby reducing available soil moisture and impairing soil fertility. In this, salinization resembles aridity and-similarly to aridity-may impose significant controls on hydrological partitioning and the strength of land-vegetation-atmosphere interactions at the catchment scale. However, the long-term impacts of salinization on the terrestrial water balance are still largely unquantified. Here, we introduce a modified Budyko's framework explicitly accounting for catchment-scale salinization and species-specific plant salt tolerance. The proposed framework is used to interpret the water-budget data of 237 Australian catchments-29% of which are already severely salt-affected-from the Australian Water Availability Project (AWAP). Our results provide theoretical and experimental evidence that salinization does influence the hydrological partitioning of salt-affected watersheds, imposing significant constraints on water availability and enhancing aridity. The same approach can be applied to estimate salinization level and vegetation salt tolerance at the basin scale, which would be difficult to assess through classical observational techniques. We also demonstrate that plant salt tolerance has a preeminent role in regulating the feedback of vegetation on the soil water budget of salt-affected basins.

3.
New Phytol ; 224(2): 644-662, 2019 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31349369

RESUMEN

Salinity is known to affect plant productivity by limiting leaf-level carbon exchange, root water uptake, and carbohydrates transport in the phloem. However, the mechanisms through which plants respond to salt exposure by adjusting leaf gas exchange and xylem-phloem flow are still mostly unexplored. A physically based model coupling xylem, leaf, and phloem flows is here developed to explain different osmoregulation patterns across species. Hydraulic coupling is controlled by leaf water potential, ψl , and determined under four different maximization hypotheses: water uptake (1), carbon assimilation (2), sucrose transport (3), or (4) profit function - i.e. carbon gain minus hydraulic risk. All four hypotheses assume that finite transpiration occurs, providing a further constraint on ψl . With increasing salinity, the model captures different transpiration patterns observed in halophytes (nonmonotonic) and glycophytes (monotonically decreasing) by reproducing the species-specific strength of xylem-leaf-phloem coupling. Salt tolerance thus emerges as plant's capability of differentiating between salt- and drought-induced hydraulic risk, and to regulate internal flows and osmolytes accordingly. Results are shown to be consistent across optimization schemes (1-3) for both halophytes and glycophytes. In halophytes, however, profit-maximization (4) predicts systematically higher ψl than (1-3), pointing to the need of an updated definition of hydraulic cost for halophytes under saline conditions.


Asunto(s)
Osmorregulación/fisiología , Floema/fisiología , Hojas de la Planta/fisiología , Estrés Salino , Agua/fisiología , Xilema/fisiología , Modelos Biológicos , Transpiración de Plantas , Plantas/efectos de los fármacos , Plantas/metabolismo , Cloruro de Sodio/administración & dosificación , Cloruro de Sodio/toxicidad
4.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 19(37): 25634-25642, 2017 Sep 27.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28905056

RESUMEN

Wettability has been recognized to play a fundamental role in the efficacy of water flooding processes of carbonate oil and gas reservoirs. However, the theoretical mechanism governing this process is still not entirely understood. This can be partly attributed to the absence of ad hoc tools and standardized sample-preparation methodologies for comprehensive transient characterization of the mineral surface. Here, we use atomic force microscopy (AFM) to investigate the effect of different calcite sample-preparation methodologies in estimating the macroscopic water static contact angle (SCA). Single crystal calcite surfaces are aged in deionized (DI) water baths, for different exposure times, and dried by different techniques, to reveal SCA discrepancies. Trends and observations are explained with the use of time-dependent adhesion maps of the surface obtained by bimodal AFM. In this context, the AFM interpretation of macroscopic observations provides a means to single out the different factors influencing wettability, thus allowing for a more standardized description of the processes responsible for the modification of the affinity between the mineral rock and injected water.

5.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 12301, 2017 09 26.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28951550

RESUMEN

The Middle East is one of the most water stressed regions in the world, receiving the majority of its hydrological input during the winter, in the form of highly variable and scattered precipitation. The persistence of wintertime anticyclonic conditions over the region can deflect storm tracks and result in extended spells of exceptionally hot weather, favoring prolonged droughts and posing a major threat to the already fragile hydrological equilibrium of the Middle East. Despite their potential impacts on water-security, winter warm spells (WWS's) have received far less attention than their summer counterparts, and the climatic drivers leading to WWS's onset are still largely unexplored. Here, we investigate their relationship with the internal modes of variability in the Atlantic Ocean, already known to influence winter circulation and extremes in Eurasia and Northern America. We show that the occurrence of WWS's is strongly correlated with Atlantic variability over decadal time scales. To explain this correlation, we propose a teleconnection mechanism linking Atlantic variability to WWS's via the propagation of Rossby waves from the North Atlantic pool, and the mediation of the Mediterranean circulation - thereby providing a basis to better predict future warming and aridification trends in the Middle East.

6.
Am Nat ; 179(4): 524-35, 2012 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22437181

RESUMEN

Abstract Directionality in coupling, defined as the linkage relating causes to their effects at a later time, can be used to explain the core dynamics of ecological systems by untangling direct and feedback relationships between the different components of the systems. Inferring causality from measured ecological variables sampled through time remains a formidable challenge further made difficult by the action of periodic drivers overlapping the natural dynamics of the system. Periodicity in the drivers can often mask the self-sustained oscillations originating from the autonomous dynamics. While linear and direct causal relationships are commonly addressed in the time domain, using the well-established machinery of Granger causality (G-causality), the presence of periodic forcing requires frequency-based statistics (e.g., the Fourier transform), able to distinguish coupling induced by oscillations in external drivers from genuine endogenous interactions. Recent nonparametric spectral extensions of G-causality to the frequency domain pave the way for the scale-by-scale decomposition of causality, which can improve our ability to link oscillatory behaviors of ecological networks to causal mechanisms. The performance of both spectral G-causality and its conditional extension for multivariate systems is explored in quantifying causal interactions within ecological networks. Through two case studies involving synthetic and actual time series, it is demonstrated that conditional G-causality outperforms standard G-causality in identifying causal links and their concomitant timescales.


Asunto(s)
Ecosistema , Modelos Teóricos , Fotosíntesis , Suelo , Estadísticas no Paramétricas , Árboles
SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA