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Combining meteorology, eddy fluxes, isotope measurements, and modeling to understand environmental controls of carbon isotope discrimination at the canopy scale
Authors:J. N. ARANIBAR &dagger  ,J. A. BERRY&dagger  ,W. J. RILEY&Dagger  ,D. E. PATAKI§  ,B. E. LAW¶  , J. R. EHLERINGER
Affiliation:Department of Biology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA,;Department of Global Ecology, Carnegie Institution of Washington, Stanford, CA, USA,;Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Earth Sciences Division, Berkeley, CA, USA,;Department of Earth System Sciences, Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA,;College of Forestry, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, USA
Abstract:Estimates of terrestrial carbon isotope discrimination are useful to quantify the terrestrial carbon sink. Carbon isotope discrimination by terrestrial ecosystems may vary on seasonal and interannual time frames, because it is affected by processes (e.g. photosynthesis, stomatal conductance, and respiration) that respond to variable environmental conditions (e.g. air humidity, temperature, light). In this study, we report simulations of the temporal variability of canopy‐scale C3 photosynthetic carbon isotope discrimination obtained with an ecophysiologically based model (ISOLSM) designed for inclusion in global models. ISOLSM was driven by half‐hourly meteorology, and parameterized with eddy covariance measurements of carbon and energy fluxes and foliar carbon isotope ratios from a pine forest in Metolius (OR). Comparing simulated carbon and energy fluxes with observations provided a range of parameter values that optimized the simulated fluxes. We found that the sensitivity of photosynthetic carbon isotope discrimination to the slope of the stomatal conductance equation (m, Ball–Berry constant) provided an additional constraint to the model, reducing the wide parameter space obtained from the fluxes alone. We selected values of m that resulted in similar simulated long‐term discrimination as foliar isotope ratios measured at the site. The model was tested with 13C measurements of ecosystem (δR) and foliar (δf) respiration. The daily variability of simulated 13C values of assimilated carbon (δA) was similar to that of observed δf, and higher than that of observed and simulated δR. We also found similar relationships between environmental factors (i.e. vapor pressure deficit) and simulated δR as measured in ecosystem surveys of δR. Therefore, ISOLSM reasonably simulated the short‐term variability of δA controlled by atmospheric conditions at the canopy scale, which can be useful to estimate the variability of terrestrial isotope discrimination. Our study also shows that including the capacity to simulate carbon isotope discrimination, together with simple ecosystem isotope measurements, can provide a useful constraint to land surface and carbon balance models.
Keywords:atmospheric controls    biosphere–atmosphere exchange    canopy scale    carbon fluxes    carbon isotope discrimination    ecophysiological model    eddy fluxes    parameter constraints    photosynthesis    stomatal conductance
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