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Stomatal optimization based on xylem hydraulics (SOX) improves land surface model simulation of vegetation responses to climate

Authors :
Anna B. Harper
Leonardo Montagnani
Cleiton B. Eller
Peter M. Cox
Maurizio Mencuccini
Bruno H. P. Rosado
Belinda E. Medlyn
Karina Williams
Georg Wohlfahrt
Rafael S. Oliveira
Patrick Meir
Lucy Rowland
Yael Wagner
Tamir Klein
Kathrin Fuchs
Teresa Rosas
Grazielle Sales Teodoro
Ilaíne S. Matos
Stephen Sitch
Source :
New Phytologist, 226 (6), The New Phytologist, Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, New Phytologist, Eller, C B, Rowland, L, Mencuccini, M, Rosas, T, Williams, K, Harper, A, Medlyn, B E, Wagner, Y, Klein, T, Teodoro, G S, Oliveira, R S, Matos, I S, Rosado, B H, Fuchs, K, Wohlfahrt, G, Montagnani, L, Meir, P, Sitch, S & Cox, P M 2020, ' Stomatal optimisation based on xylem hydraulics (SOX) improves land surface model simulation of vegetation responses to climate ', New Phytologist . https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.16419
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Summary Land surface models (LSMs) typically use empirical functions to represent vegetation responses to soil drought. These functions largely neglect recent advances in plant ecophysiology that link xylem hydraulic functioning with stomatal responses to climate.We developed an analytical stomatal optimization model based on xylem hydraulics (SOX) to predict plant responses to drought. Coupling SOX to the Joint UK Land Environment Simulator (JULES) LSM, we conducted a global evaluation of SOX against leaf‐ and ecosystem‐level observations.SOX simulates leaf stomatal conductance responses to climate for woody plants more accurately and parsimoniously than the existing JULES stomatal conductance model. An ecosystem‐level evaluation at 70 eddy flux sites shows that SOX decreases the sensitivity of gross primary productivity (GPP) to soil moisture, which improves the model agreement with observations and increases the predicted annual GPP by 30% in relation to JULES. SOX decreases JULES root‐mean‐square error in GPP by up to 45% in evergreen tropical forests, and can simulate realistic patterns of canopy water potential and soil water dynamics at the studied sites.SOX provides a parsimonious way to incorporate recent advances in plant hydraulics and optimality theory into LSMs, and an alternative to empirical stress factors.<br />See also the Commentary on this article by Anderegg & Venturas, 226: 1535–1538.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
New Phytologist, 226 (6), The New Phytologist, Dipòsit Digital de Documents de la UAB, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, New Phytologist, Eller, C B, Rowland, L, Mencuccini, M, Rosas, T, Williams, K, Harper, A, Medlyn, B E, Wagner, Y, Klein, T, Teodoro, G S, Oliveira, R S, Matos, I S, Rosado, B H, Fuchs, K, Wohlfahrt, G, Montagnani, L, Meir, P, Sitch, S & Cox, P M 2020, ' Stomatal optimisation based on xylem hydraulics (SOX) improves land surface model simulation of vegetation responses to climate ', New Phytologist . https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.16419
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bd74a283ceb08471a0ab374ff38616ca
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/nph.16419