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Full-Text Articles in Agriculture
Assessing Precipitation, Evapotranspiration, And Ndvi As Controls Of U.S. Great Plains Plant Production, Maosi Chen, William J. Parton, Melannie D. Hartman, Stephen J. Del Grosso, William K. Smith, Alan K. Knapp, Susan Lutz, Justin D. Derner, Compton J. Tucker, Dennis S. Ojma, Jerry D. Volesky, Mitchell B. Stephenson, Walter H. Schacht, Wei Gao
Assessing Precipitation, Evapotranspiration, And Ndvi As Controls Of U.S. Great Plains Plant Production, Maosi Chen, William J. Parton, Melannie D. Hartman, Stephen J. Del Grosso, William K. Smith, Alan K. Knapp, Susan Lutz, Justin D. Derner, Compton J. Tucker, Dennis S. Ojma, Jerry D. Volesky, Mitchell B. Stephenson, Walter H. Schacht, Wei Gao
Department of Agronomy and Horticulture: Faculty Publications
Productivity throughout the North American Great Plains grasslands is generally considered to be water limited, with the strength of this limitation increasing as precipitation decreases. We hypothesize that cumulative actual evapotranspiration water loss (AET) from April to July is the precipitation-related variable most correlated to aboveground net primary production (ANPP) in the U.S. Great Plains (GP). We tested this by evaluating the relationship of ANPP to AET, precipitation, and plant transpiration (Tr). We used multi-year ANPP data from five sites ranging from semiarid grasslands in Colorado and Wyoming to mesic grasslands in Nebraska and Kansas, mean annual NRCS ANPP, and …