Representation of vegetation dynamics in the modelling of terrestrial ecosystems: comparing two contrasting approaches within European climate space
Authored by B Smith, IC Prentice, MT Sykes
Date Published: 2001
DOI: 10.1046/j.1466-822x.2001.t01-1-00256.x
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
1 Advances in dynamic ecosystem modelling have made a;lumber of
different approaches to vegetation dynamics possible. Here we compare
two models representing contrasting degrees of abstraction of the
processes governing dynamics in real vegetation.
2 Model (a) (GUESS) simulates explicitly growth and competition among
individual plants. Differences in crown structure (height, depth, area
and LAI) influence relative light uptake by neighbours. Assimilated
carbon is allocated individually by each plant to its leaf, fine root
and sapwood tissues. Carbon allocation and turnover of sapwood to
heartwood in turn govern height and diameter growth.
3 Model (b) (LPJ) incorporates a `dynamic global vegetation model'
(DGVM) architecture, simulating growth of populations of plant
functional types (PFTs) over a grid cell, integrating individual-level
processes over the proportional area (foliar projective cover, FPC)
occupied by each PFT. Individual plants are not simulated, but are
replaced by explicit parameterizations of their growth and interactions.
4 The models are identical in their representation of core physiological
and biogeochemical processes. Both also use the same set of PFTs, corresponding to the major woody plant groups in Europe, plus a grass
type.
5 When applied at a range of locations, broadly spanning climatic
variation within Europe, both models successfully predicted PFT
composition and succession within modern natural vegetation. However, the individual-based model performed better in areas where deciduous and
evergreen types coincide, and in areas subject to pronounced seasonal
water deficits, which would tend to favour grasses over
drought-intolerant trees.
6 Differences in model performance could be traced to their treatment of
individual-level processes, in particular light competition and
stress-induced mortality.
7 Our results suggest that an explicit individual-based approach to
vegetation dynamics may be an advantage in modelling of ecosystem
structure and function at the resolution required for regional-to
continental-scale studies.
Tags
Competition
pattern
Plant
Respiration
Community dynamics
Field-measurements
Trees
Carbon balance
Biosphere model
Grass