4.7 Article

Reconciling observations with modeling: The fate of water and carbon allocation in a mature deciduous forest exposed to elevated CO2

Journal

AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY
Volume 174, Issue -, Pages 144-157

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.agrformet.2013.02.005

Keywords

Ecohydrological Modeling; Plant water relations; FACE experiments; Forest productivity; CO2 enrichment; Swiss Canopy Crane

Funding

  1. ACQWA Project (Assessing Climate impacts on the Quantity and quality of WAter)
  2. European Union

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Projections of the future carbon and water cycles rely on knowledge on how forests will respond to rising atmospheric CO2. Experiments with elevated CO2 are logistically challenging and carbon pools and fluxes are difficult to measure and upscale due to their spatiotemporal heterogeneity. Therefore, it is important to combine the knowledge derived from experimental results with modeling. Here, we systematically compare data from a free air CO2 enrichment (FACE) experiment in a mature deciduous forest in Switzerland with realizations from an ecohydrological model (Tethys-Chloris). We test whether a mechanistic ecohydrological model is able to simulate physiological plant responses under ambient and elevated CO2 concentration. We overcome measurement limitations by quantifying differences in response to ambient and elevated CO2 over ten years. The reliability of model realizations is demonstrated by comparing simulations with field observations of stomatal conductance, sap flow, leaf and fruit litter, and stem growth. The model successfully captures the observed CO2-induced difference in stomatal conductance and transpiration and its sensitivity to atmospheric demand, as well as qualitative changes in soil moisture. The simulated differences between CO2 scenarios generally fall within the uncertainty of experimental observations, both for the carbon and water balance. Simulated total evapotranspiration is 2.8% (18 mm yr(-1)) lower and soil moisture 1.2% higher in the CO2-enriched scenario. Latent and sensible heat are modified by ca. 1 W m(-2). Net primary production is simulated to increase by 19.8% and allocation to stem growth is 53 gC yr(-1) m(-2) higher in the elevated CO2 scenario, which represents the limit of the detection threshold of the experiment. Results show that while ecohydrological models can be used to reliably simulate multi-year energy, water, and carbon fluxes at the stand level, testing carbon allocation remains critical with current accuracy of field measurements. Uncertainties due to the simplified carbon allocation scheme are shown to be more significant for carbon than for energy and water fluxes. Generally, we conclude that for this type of forest, differences in annual energy and water fluxes induced by elevated CO2 are likely to be less than 10%. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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