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Effect of tree demography and flexible root water uptake for modeling the carbon and water cycles of Amazonia

Authors :
Joetzjer, Emilie
Maignan, Fabienne
Chave, Jérôme
Goll, Daniel
Poulter, Ben
Barichivich, Jonathan
Marechaux, Isabelle
Luyssaert, Sebastiaan
Guimberteau, Matthieu
Naudts, K.
Bonal, Damien
Ciais, P.
Joetzjer, Emilie
Maignan, Fabienne
Chave, Jérôme
Goll, Daniel
Poulter, Ben
Barichivich, Jonathan
Marechaux, Isabelle
Luyssaert, Sebastiaan
Guimberteau, Matthieu
Naudts, K.
Bonal, Damien
Ciais, P.
Source :
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Repository
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Amazonian forest plays a crucial role in regulating the carbon and water cycles in the global climate system. However, the representation of biogeochemical fluxes and forest structure in dynamic global vegetation models (DGVMs) remains challenging. This situation has considerable implications to simulate the state and dynamics of Amazonian forest. This study aims at simulating the dynamic of the evapotranspiration (ET), productivity (GPP), biomass (AGB) and forest structure of wet tropical forests in the Amazon basin using the updated ORCHIDEE land surface model. The latter is improved for two processes: stand structure and demography, and plant water uptake by roots. Stand structure is simulated by adapting the CAN version of ORCHIDEE, originally developed for temperate forests. Here, we account for the permanent recruitment of young individual trees, the distribution of stand level growth into 20 different cohorts of variable diameter classes, and mortality due to asymmetric competition for light. Plant water uptake is simulated by including soil-to-root hydraulic resistance (RS). To evaluate the effect of the soil resistance alone, we performed factorial simulations with demography only (CAN) and both demography and resistance (CAN-RS). AGB, ET and GPP outputs of CAN-RS are also compared with the standard version of ORCHIDEE (TRUNK) for which eco-hydrological parameters were tuned globally to fit GPP and evapotranspiration at flux tower sites. All the model versions are benchmarked against in situ and regional datasets. We show that CAN-RS correctly reproduce stand level structural variables (as CAN) like diameter classes and tree densities when validated using in-situ data. Besides offering the key advantage to simulate forest's structure, it also correctly simulates ET and GPP and improves fluxes spatial patterns when compared to TRUNK. With the new formulation of soil water uptake, which is driven by soil water availability rather than root-biomass, the sim

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Repository
Notes :
Ecological Modelling vol.469 (2022) p.1-15 [ISSN 0304-3800], English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1362439539
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016.j.ecolmodel.2022.109969