Predicting ecosystem functioning from plant traits: Results from a multi-scale ecophysiological modeling approach
Authored by Wijk M T Van
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2006.12.007
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Ecosystem functioning is the result of processes working at a hierarchy
of scales. The representation of these processes in a model that is
mathematically tractable and ecologically meaningful is a big challenge.
In this paper I describe an individual based model (PLACO-PLAnt
COmpetition) that represents the effects that individual plant traits
and environmental resources have on the growth of individual plants and, by implementing key interactions of and feedbacks on resource
competition and nutrient cycling, also simulates the behaviour of the
plant community and the ecosystem as a whole. The model is tested on
results obtained in long term fertilization experiments, after which the
model is applied to gain insight in questions related to plant diversity
and ecosystem functioning. Is there a clear relationship between the
diversity of the plant characteristics introduced in the model and
overall system level productivity? The model simulations captured the
patterns observed in the long term fertilization experiments and
correctly predicted the dominance of Betula nana under the fertilization
treatment. In the biodiversity simulations at both low and high nutrient
inputs, an optimum curve relationship occurred between diversity and
system level growth, and between diversity and system level biomass. At
low nutrient input, system level productivity showed a curved
relationship with an intermediate optimum with Shannon's diversity
index, but at high nutrient input single species dominated systems also
reached high values of productivity. The model simulations show that
individual plant behaviour observed when a plant is growing on its own
contains limited information about its behaviour and productivity within
a competitive multi-species environment. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All
rights reserved.
Tags
Competition
Dynamics
Biodiversity
mechanistic model
allocation
Vegetation
Species-diversity
Arctic tundra
Community composition
Current knowledge