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Integrating ecophysiology and forest landscape models to improve projections of drought effects under climate change
Authors:Eric J Gustafson  Arjan M G De Bruijn  Robert E Pangle  Jean‐Marc Limousin  Nate G McDowell  William T Pockman  Brian R Sturtevant  Jordan D Muss  Mark E Kubiske
Institution:1. Institute for Applied Ecosystem Studies, Northern Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Rhinelander, WI, USA;2. Department of Forestry and Natural Resources, Purdue University, W. Lafayette, IN, USA;3. Department of Biology, MSC03 2020, 1 University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, USA;4. Earth and Environmental Sciences Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, USA
Abstract:Fundamental drivers of ecosystem processes such as temperature and precipitation are rapidly changing and creating novel environmental conditions. Forest landscape models (FLM) are used by managers and policy‐makers to make projections of future ecosystem dynamics under alternative management or policy options, but the links between the fundamental drivers and projected responses are weak and indirect, limiting their reliability for projecting the impacts of climate change. We developed and tested a relatively mechanistic method to simulate the effects of changing precipitation on species competition within the LANDIS‐II FLM. Using data from a field precipitation manipulation experiment in a piñon pine (Pinus edulis) and juniper (Juniperus monosperma) ecosystem in New Mexico (USA), we calibrated our model to measurements from ambient control plots and tested predictions under the drought and irrigation treatments against empirical measurements. The model successfully predicted behavior of physiological variables under the treatments. Discrepancies between model output and empirical data occurred when the monthly time step of the model failed to capture the short‐term dynamics of the ecosystem as recorded by instantaneous field measurements. We applied the model to heuristically assess the effect of alternative climate scenarios on the piñon–juniper ecosystem and found that warmer and drier climate reduced productivity and increased the risk of drought‐induced mortality, especially for piñon. We concluded that the direct links between fundamental drivers and growth rates in our model hold great promise to improve our understanding of ecosystem processes under climate change and improve management decisions because of its greater reliance on first principles.
Keywords:climate change  competition for light  drought  forest landscape disturbance and succession model  LANDIS‐II  Piñ  on–  juniper ecosystem  PnET‐Succession  tree mortality  water stress
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