An individual-based model of forest volatile organic compound emissions-UVAFME-VOC v1.0
Authored by Bin Wang, Manuel T Lerdau
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2017.02.006
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Abstract
Forests produce and emit abundant non-methane volatile hydrocarbon
species (VOCs) influencing the atmosphere chemistry and climate. Over a
half century of research has produced significant understandings of the
biochemistry and eco-physiology of biogenic VOCs. However, VOCs
production is highly species-specific, and the impact of changes in
species composition and abundance on VOCs emissions is unobservable in
the time scales usually seen in field experiments. Prior modelling
efforts are based on cases with an aggregate representation of
vegetation. Individual-based models of forests simulate the dynamics of
complex forest ecosystems based on birth, growth, and death of the
individual trees comprising a simulated forest. Here an individual-based
forest VOCs emissions model UVAFME-VOC v1.0 is developed from the
state-of-the-art individual-based forest gap model, UVAFME, coupled with
a canopy VOCs emission model. UVAFME-VOC v1.0 implementation for the
temperate deciduous forest in the southeastern United States is tested
by comparisons to independent data in the region. A model application
tested the hypothesis that the historical collapse of American Chestnut
(Castanea dentate) resulted in the dominance of oak trees (Quercus spp.)
and enhanced isoprene emissions. The model demonstrated a capability to
simulate the forest compositional and structural dynamics and forest
isoprene emission dynamics. The simulations show isoprene emissions
depend heavily on forest successional stage and species composition, suggesting that environmental change can affect forest VOCs emissions
primarily by influencing forest species composition. Prediction of
isoprene emissions, of other phytogenic volatile organic compounds, and
of impacts on atmospheric chemistry of various global change agents
(e.g., warming, rising CO2, ozone elevation, and herbivory) should
explicitly consider forest diversity change. This individual-based model
could provide widespread applications in addressing these problems. (C)
2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Individual-based model
Dynamics
ecology
patterns
carbon
North-america
Gap models
Biogenic emissions
Isoprene emission
Fraxinus-excelsior
Chestnut
Uvafme-voc
Volatile organic compound
Oak
American chestnut
Forest diversity