The distinct co-occurrence of soil water content (SWC) and vapor pressure deficit (VPD) influences ecosystem water use efficiency (WUE) by modifying the synergistic relationship between gross primary productivity (GPP) and evapotranspiration (ET), yet how they impact each other remains unclear in agricultural ecosystems. Based on long-term eddy covariance flux data (2005–2014) observed at a rainfed maize site in Northeast China, we examined how SWC and VPD affect WUE by decomposing it into gross primary productivity to transpiration ratio (GPP/T) and transpiration to evapotranspiration ratio (T/ET). Results showed that WUE was more sensitive to VPD than SWC. Increasing VPD directly suppressed WUE under all soil moisture conditions, whereas SWC had a context-dependent effect: higher SWC reduced WUE under low VPD but enhanced WUE under high VPD. The underlying mechanism was that changes in GPP/T (plant physiological regulation) dominated the WUE responses to both SWC and VPD (contributing 70.25–83.30% and 67.89–87.96%, respectively), while T/ET (evapotranspiration partitioning) played a minor role (<18%). Therefore, to improve WUE under future drier climates, agronomic practices should focus on enhancing photosynthetic capacity and stomatal regulation (e.g., selecting drought-tolerant varieties, optimizing nitrogen supply) rather than solely reducing soil evaporation. Furthermore, supplemental irrigation applied specifically during periods of high VPD (when atmospheric demand is strong) can effectively enhance WUE, as soil moisture becomes critically beneficial under such conditions. These findings provide a mechanistic basis for improving water use efficiency in rainfed maize systems under climate change.
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Yangjie Guo
Z. Q. Zhu
Yuheng Zhang
Plants
Yangzhou University
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Guo et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69df2bece4eeef8a2a6b0df5 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/plants15081190