You generate a family of curves like that when charging a transistor junction (again, for the same reasons, strong nonlinearity). Sometimes these are even specified in the datasheet: newer Infineon MOSFETs usually have a "Coss energy equivalent" or "time equivalent" figure.
The energy equivalent is what capacitance you get when you determine the energy stored in the junction capacitance, and assume it was stored in a linear (constant) capacitance. The capacitance at rated voltage might be 100pF, but the energy equivalent might be 150pF, due to the additional charge taken on at lower voltages. However, it's not much difference, because charging at low voltage means the power was low, and therefore even though a lot of time might be taken at those low voltages, the total (integral) energy isn't much higher.
The time equivalent is what capacitance you get when you determine the charging time for a particular circuit, and assume it was stored in a linear (constant) capacitance. Typically, the circuit is a 100k resistor supplied from V = Vdss, and the risetime is taken as 0-80% or something like that. An RC conversion factor then gives the effective C. The capacitance equivalent might be 300pF, due to the extra time taken at low voltages, which factors directly into this measurement. The curve slows down at high voltages, but thanks to the arbitrary cutoff level (the 80% or whatever figure), it doesn't spend too much time in the nearly-fully-charged exponential tail.
You can define other equivalents quite easily. A constant-current (charge equivalent) figure gives yet another result. You can do an inductive charging equivalent, which would be typical of two transistors in a half-bridge, where the inductance is due to the loop between supply capacitance and the two transistors; the waveform would be representative of hard switching at zero load current. In this case, the extremely high Coss at low voltages looks very much like diode reverse recovery, except that it's taking place at +10-30V rather than -0.5V. The drain voltage "snaps" open in a very similar manner, because during that "recovery" phase, inductor current is rising steadily, therefore charge is rising quadratically, and by the time the capacitance plummets, current is so high that the voltage risetime just explodes out of the way (again, much like my waveform posted earlier).
The crappy part about any of these equivalents is: they are extremely sensitive to the particular conditions they were measured at. They vary with supply voltage and threshold range.
I have some spreadsheets sitting around where I've both modeled the Coss of some MOSFETs (based on real measurements, datasheets and SPICE models -- none of which really lined up, by the way..), and derived a few of these figures based on them. Lemme see about showing some of that..
Tim