Influence of vegetation spatial structure on growth and water fluxes of a mixed forest: Results from the NOTG 3D model
Authored by Guillaume Simioni, Guillaume Marie, Roland Huc
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2016.02.004
Sponsors:
Fédération de Recherche ECCOREV
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Many natural terrestrial ecosystems, agroforestry systems, and, increasingly, forest plantations, are made of a mixture of species and
display significant structural heterogeneity. Yet most carbon-based
biophysical models are limited to homogeneous, monospecific canopies.
We explored whether the spatial structure at the Font-Blanche
experimental site, located in a mixed Mediterranean forest of Aleppo
pine and holm oak in south-east France, could affect the components of
the carbon and water cycles. We used NOTG, a new 3D, process-based, and
individual-based model specifically developed to study the importance of
the spatial structure on the carbon and water cycles of complex
ecosystems. It incorporates processes involved in the energy, carbon, and water cycles at the tree (radiation interception, photosynthesis, phenology, allocation, senescence, transpiration), and soil (soil
moisture, soil organic matter decomposition) levels. It is designed to
handle various plant phenological types (deciduous, non opportunistic
evergreen, and opportunistic evergreen), and a comprehensive description
of plant C pools. The model is designed to study water and carbon fluxes
at the stand scale over one to a few years.
In this study, NOTG was parameterized for the Font-Blanche forest and
two five-year simulations were made using either the full 3D
representation, or a simplified 1D representation. Comparison of model
outputs against observations at the tree, soil, and ecosystem scales, showed a much better accuracy when using the 3D representation. This
illustrates the dependence of plant and ecosystem function to the above-
and below-ground spatial structures, and the usefulness of such detailed
models when dealing with structurally complex ecosystems. (C) 2016
Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Simulation
carbon
Tree
Quercus-ilex
Photosynthesis
Radiative-transfer
Leaf
Cooccurring mediterranean oaks
Temperature response
Transpiration