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Modelling the vegetation of the Earth

Haxeltine, Alex (1996)
Abstract
This thesis describes the development and application of an equilibrium terrestrial biosphere model, BIOME3. The model simulates vegetation distribution and biogeochemistry, and couples vegetation distribution directly to biogeochemistry. A photosynthesis scheme was developed with maximum photosynthetic rates derived using a theory based on optimal nitrogen allocation; the scheme has the important feature of predicting optimal photosynthesis rates that are proportional to absorbed photosynthetically active radiation. Inputs to BIOME3 consist of latitude, soil texture class, absolute minimum temperature and monthly climate (temperature, precipitation and sunshine). A minimal set of ecophysiological constraints is first applied to determine... (More)
This thesis describes the development and application of an equilibrium terrestrial biosphere model, BIOME3. The model simulates vegetation distribution and biogeochemistry, and couples vegetation distribution directly to biogeochemistry. A photosynthesis scheme was developed with maximum photosynthetic rates derived using a theory based on optimal nitrogen allocation; the scheme has the important feature of predicting optimal photosynthesis rates that are proportional to absorbed photosynthetically active radiation. Inputs to BIOME3 consist of latitude, soil texture class, absolute minimum temperature and monthly climate (temperature, precipitation and sunshine). A minimal set of ecophysiological constraints is first applied to determine which plant functional types (PFTs) may potentially occur. A coupled carbon and water flux model is then used to calculate, for each PFT, the leaf area index (LAI) that maximizes net primary production (NPP), subject to the constraint that NPP must be sufficient to maintain this LAI. Competition between PFTs is simulated by using the opitimal NPP of each PFT as an index of competitiveness, with additional rules to approximate the dynamic equilibrium between natural disturbance and succession driven by light competition. A two-layer soil hydrology scheme allows simulation of the competitive balance between grass and woody vegetation, including the effects of soil texture. Model output consists of a quantitative vegetation state description in terms of the dominant PFT, secondary PFTs present and the total LAI and NPP for the ecosystem. A two-way coupling of the carbon and water fluxes through canopy conductance allows BIOME3 to simulate the response of photosynthesis, canopy conductance and leaf area to environmental factors including atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration. Comparison with the mapped distribution of global vegetation shows that the model successfully reproduces the broad scale patterns in potential natural vegetation distribution. Comparison with NPP measurements and a fractional absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (FPAR) climatology based on remotely sensed greenness measurements provide further checks on the models internal logic. BIOME3 is used to examine the response of vegetation to changes in carbon dioxide and climate since the Last Glacial Maximum; this application of the model demonstraters that the lowered atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration had a potentially large impact on patterns in vegetation distribution. The model is also used to simulate the combined effects of climate and carbon dioxide concentration of global patterns of both vegetation distribution and NPP under a doubled greenhouse gas climate. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Professor Running, Steve
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
fraction absorbed photosynthetically active radiation, photosynthesis, canopy conductance, plant functional types, leaf area index, net primary production, vegetation distribution, biome, terrestrial biosphere model, biogeography, climate change, Last Glacial Maximum, Plant ecology, Växtekologi
pages
22 pages
publisher
Plant Ecology and Systematics, Lund University
defense location
Ecology House, Sölvegatan 37
defense date
1996-04-26 10:15:00
external identifiers
  • other:ISRN: SE-LUNDBDS/NBBE-96/1045+124p
ISBN
91-7105-072-8
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Plant Ecology and Systematics (Closed 2011) (011004000)
id
f293e1b8-ca86-4450-af0f-aadb3e6f679b (old id 28387)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 12:04:05
date last changed
2023-04-18 18:20:04
@phdthesis{f293e1b8-ca86-4450-af0f-aadb3e6f679b,
  abstract     = {{This thesis describes the development and application of an equilibrium terrestrial biosphere model, BIOME3. The model simulates vegetation distribution and biogeochemistry, and couples vegetation distribution directly to biogeochemistry. A photosynthesis scheme was developed with maximum photosynthetic rates derived using a theory based on optimal nitrogen allocation; the scheme has the important feature of predicting optimal photosynthesis rates that are proportional to absorbed photosynthetically active radiation. Inputs to BIOME3 consist of latitude, soil texture class, absolute minimum temperature and monthly climate (temperature, precipitation and sunshine). A minimal set of ecophysiological constraints is first applied to determine which plant functional types (PFTs) may potentially occur. A coupled carbon and water flux model is then used to calculate, for each PFT, the leaf area index (LAI) that maximizes net primary production (NPP), subject to the constraint that NPP must be sufficient to maintain this LAI. Competition between PFTs is simulated by using the opitimal NPP of each PFT as an index of competitiveness, with additional rules to approximate the dynamic equilibrium between natural disturbance and succession driven by light competition. A two-layer soil hydrology scheme allows simulation of the competitive balance between grass and woody vegetation, including the effects of soil texture. Model output consists of a quantitative vegetation state description in terms of the dominant PFT, secondary PFTs present and the total LAI and NPP for the ecosystem. A two-way coupling of the carbon and water fluxes through canopy conductance allows BIOME3 to simulate the response of photosynthesis, canopy conductance and leaf area to environmental factors including atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration. Comparison with the mapped distribution of global vegetation shows that the model successfully reproduces the broad scale patterns in potential natural vegetation distribution. Comparison with NPP measurements and a fractional absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (FPAR) climatology based on remotely sensed greenness measurements provide further checks on the models internal logic. BIOME3 is used to examine the response of vegetation to changes in carbon dioxide and climate since the Last Glacial Maximum; this application of the model demonstraters that the lowered atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration had a potentially large impact on patterns in vegetation distribution. The model is also used to simulate the combined effects of climate and carbon dioxide concentration of global patterns of both vegetation distribution and NPP under a doubled greenhouse gas climate.}},
  author       = {{Haxeltine, Alex}},
  isbn         = {{91-7105-072-8}},
  keywords     = {{fraction absorbed photosynthetically active radiation; photosynthesis; canopy conductance; plant functional types; leaf area index; net primary production; vegetation distribution; biome; terrestrial biosphere model; biogeography; climate change; Last Glacial Maximum; Plant ecology; Växtekologi}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Plant Ecology and Systematics, Lund University}},
  title        = {{Modelling the vegetation of the Earth}},
  year         = {{1996}},
}