A 3D model for light interception in heterogeneous crop:weed canopies: Model structure and evaluation
Authored by N M Munier-Jolain, S H M Guyot, N Colbach
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2012.10.023
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
French National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA)
Region of Burgundy
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Models predicting photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) in
heterogeneous canopies are an essential component of process-based weed
dynamics models for assessing integrated weed management strategies.
Most existing light availability models either consider only homogeneous
canopies or are based on optical principles that are too complex for
multi-annual and large-scale simulations required for evaluating weed
dynamics. The TROLL model adopted a simpler approach, discretizing the
canopy into cubic volume cells ({''}voxels{''}) and successively
calculating PAR transmitted between voxel layers as a function of leaf
area and extinction coefficient in each voxel. The present study aimed
at developing at a simple, generic individual-based 3D model predicting
light availability and interception in heterogeneous canopies for
subsequent introduction into a weed dynamics model called FLORSYS. In a
first step, TROLL was adapted to crop:weed canopies for arable crops in
temperate latitudes by (1) developing a new function adapted to annuals
for describing plant morphology, (2) accounting for lateral light
transmission as a function of solar angle, and (3) predicting the
variation in lateral transmission with season and latitude. In the
second step, the predictions produced by the FLORSYS light availability
model were compared to PAR measurements in heterogeneous crop stands.
The model was shown to rank situations correctly and to predict incident
PAR satisfactorily. A sensitivity analysis of FLoRSYS identified the
voxel size optimizing prediction quality. In the last step, simulations
were run to evaluate the potential of biological weed regulation via
crop:weed competition for light. The present model will be connected to
emergence, growth and development models in further studies. (C) 2012
Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
emergence
Simulation-model
Population-dynamics
Plant
Spatial-patterns
Interspecific competition
Sugar-beet
Chenopodium-album l
Mean squared error
Ecophysiological model