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Forest water use and water use efficiency at elevated CO2: a model‐data intercomparison at two contrasting temperate forest FACE sites
Authors:Martin G. De Kauwe  Belinda E. Medlyn  Sönke Zaehle  Anthony P. Walker  Michael C. Dietze  Thomas Hickler  Atul K. Jain  Yiqi Luo  William J. Parton  I. Colin Prentice  Benjamin Smith  Peter E. Thornton  Shusen Wang  Ying‐Ping Wang  David Wårlind  Ensheng Weng  Kristine Y. Crous  David S. Ellsworth  Paul J. Hanson  Hyun‐ Seok Kim  Jeffrey M. Warren  Ram Oren  Richard J. Norby
Affiliation:1. Department of Biological Sciences, Macquarie University, , North Ryde, New South Wales, 2109 Australia;2. Biogeochemical Integration Department, Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, , Jena, 07745 Germany;3. Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Environmental Sciences Division and Climate Change Science Institute, , Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA;4. Department of Earth and Environment, Boston University, , Boston, MA, 02215 USA;5. Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre (BiK‐F) & Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung, , Frankfurt/Main, 60325 Germany;6. Department of Physical Geography at Goethe‐University, , Frankfurt/Main, 60438 Germany;7. Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Illinois, , Urbana, Illionis, 61801 USA;8. Department of Microbiology and Plant Biology, University of Oklahoma, , Norman, Oklahoma, 73019 USA;9. Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory, Colorado State University, , Fort Collins, Colorado, 80523‐1499 USA;10. Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science, Lund University, , Lund, 223 63 Sweden;11. Canada Centre for Remote Sensing, Natural Resources Canada, , Ottawa, ON, K1A 0E4 Canada;12. CSIRO Marine and Atmospheric Research and Centre for Australian Weather and Climate Research, , Aspendale, Victoria, 3195 Australia;13. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, University of Western Sydney, , Penrith, NSW, 2751 Australia;14. Department of Forest Sciences, College of Agriculture & Life Sciences, Seoul National University, , Gwanak‐gu, Seoul, 151‐742 Republic of Korea;15. Division of Environmental Science & Policy, Nicholas School of the Environment, Duke University, , Durham, NC, 27708 USA;16. Department of Forest Ecology & Management, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), , Ume?, SE‐901 83 Sweden
Abstract:Predicted responses of transpiration to elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration (eCO2) are highly variable amongst process‐based models. To better understand and constrain this variability amongst models, we conducted an intercomparison of 11 ecosystem models applied to data from two forest free‐air CO2 enrichment (FACE) experiments at Duke University and Oak Ridge National Laboratory. We analysed model structures to identify the key underlying assumptions causing differences in model predictions of transpiration and canopy water use efficiency. We then compared the models against data to identify model assumptions that are incorrect or are large sources of uncertainty. We found that model‐to‐model and model‐to‐observations differences resulted from four key sets of assumptions, namely (i) the nature of the stomatal response to elevated CO2 (coupling between photosynthesis and stomata was supported by the data); (ii) the roles of the leaf and atmospheric boundary layer (models which assumed multiple conductance terms in series predicted more decoupled fluxes than observed at the broadleaf site); (iii) the treatment of canopy interception (large intermodel variability, 2–15%); and (iv) the impact of soil moisture stress (process uncertainty in how models limit carbon and water fluxes during moisture stress). Overall, model predictions of the CO2 effect on WUE were reasonable (intermodel μ = approximately 28% ± 10%) compared to the observations (μ = approximately 30% ± 13%) at the well‐coupled coniferous site (Duke), but poor (intermodel μ = approximately 24% ± 6%; observations μ = approximately 38% ± 7%) at the broadleaf site (Oak Ridge). The study yields a framework for analysing and interpreting model predictions of transpiration responses to eCO2, and highlights key improvements to these types of models.
Keywords:climate change  CO2 fertilization  elevated CO2     FACE     models  plant physiology  stomatal conductance  water
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