An individual-based process model to simulate landscape-scale forest ecosystem dynamics
Authored by Werner Rammer, Rupert Seidl, Thomas A Spies, Robert M Scheller
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2012.02.015
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
http://iland.boku.ac.at/download
Abstract
Forest ecosystem dynamics emerges from nonlinear interactions between
adaptive biotic agents (i.e., individual trees) and their relationship
with a spatially and temporally heterogeneous abiotic environment.
Understanding and predicting the dynamics resulting from these complex
interactions is crucial for the sustainable stewardship of ecosystems, particularly in the context of rapidly changing environmental
conditions. Here we present iLand (the individual-based forest landscape
and disturbance model), a novel approach to simulating forest dynamics
as an emergent property of environmental drivers, ecosystem processes
and dynamic interactions across scales. Our specific objectives were (i)
to describe the model, in particular its novel approach to simulate
spatially explicit individual-tree competition for resources over large
scales within a process-based framework of physiological resource use, and (ii) to present a suite of evaluation experiments assessing iLands
ability to simulate tree growth and mortality for a wide range of forest
ecosystems. Adopting an approach rooted in ecological field theory, iLand calculates a continuous field of light availability over the
landscape, with every tree represented by a mechanistically derived, size- and species-dependent pattern of light interference. Within a
hierarchical multi-scale framework productivity is derived at
stand-level by means of a light-use efficiency approach, and downscaled
to individuals via local light availability. Allocation (based on
allometric ratios) and mortality (resulting from carbon starvation) are
modeled at the individual-tree level, accounting for adaptive behavior
of trees in response to their environment. To evaluate the model we
conducted simulations over the extended environmental gradient of a
longitudinal transect in Oregon, USA, and successfully compared results
against independently observed productivity estimates (63.4\% of
variation explained) and mortality patterns in even-aged stands. This
transect experiment was furthermore replicated for a different set of
species and ecosystems in the Austrian Alps, documenting the robustness
and generality of our approach. Model performance was also successfully
evaluated for structurally and compositionally complex old-growth
forests in the western Cascades of Oregon. Finally, the ability of our
approach to address forest ecosystem dynamics at landscape scales was
demonstrated by a computational scaling experiment. In simulating the
emergence of ecosystem patterns and dynamics as a result of complex
process interactions across scales our approach has the potential to
contribute crucial capacities to understanding and fostering forest
ecosystem resilience under changing climatic conditions. 2012 Elsevier
B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Climate-change
Growth-model
Gap models
Ecological field-theory
Net primary production
Tree mortality models
Gross primary
production
Co2 fertilization
Carbon fluxes
Douglas-fir