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- Title
Comparing optimal and empirical stomatal conductance models for application in Earth system models.
- Authors
Franks, Peter J.; Bonan, Gordon B.; Berry, Joseph A.; Lombardozzi, Danica L.; Holbrook, N. Michele; Herold, Nicholas; Oleson, Keith W.
- Abstract
Earth system models (ESMs) rely on the calculation of canopy conductance in land surface models (LSMs) to quantify the partitioning of land surface energy, water, and CO2 fluxes. This is achieved by scaling stomatal conductance, gw, determined from physiological models developed for leaves. Traditionally, models for gw have been semi‐empirical, combining physiological functions with empirically determined calibration constants. More recently, optimization theory has been applied to model gw in LSMs under the premise that it has a stronger grounding in physiological theory and might ultimately lead to improved predictive accuracy. However, this premise has not been thoroughly tested. Using original field data from contrasting forest systems, we compare a widely used empirical type and a more recently developed optimization‐type gw model, termed BB and MED, respectively. Overall, we find no difference between the two models when used to simulate gw from photosynthesis data, or leaf gas exchange from a coupled photosynthesis‐conductance model, or gross primary productivity and evapotranspiration for a FLUXNET tower site with the CLM5 community LSM. Field measurements reveal that the key fitted parameters for BB and MED, g1B and g1M, exhibit strong species specificity in magnitude and sensitivity to CO2, and CLM5 simulations reveal that failure to include this sensitivity can result in significant overestimates of evapotranspiration for high‐CO2 scenarios. Further, we show that g1B and g1M can be determined from mean ci/ca (ratio of leaf intercellular to ambient CO2 concentration). Applying this relationship with ci/ca values derived from a leaf δ13C database, we obtain a global distribution of g1B and g1M, and these values correlate significantly with mean annual precipitation. This provides a new methodology for global parameterization of the BB and MED models in LSMs, tied directly to leaf physiology but unconstrained by spatial boundaries separating designated biomes or plant functional types. We show that current optimization and empirical methods to determine stomatal conductance in Earth system models (ESMs) yield similar results and exhibit similar species‐specific sensitivities to environmental variables, including CO2. Failure to account for different stomatal sensitivities across species or vegetation types will lead to significant errors in ESM simulations, particularly for terrestrial water fluxes. The key fitted parameter calibrating optimization or empirical stomatal conductance models to different global vegetation types may be determined from mean annual precipitation, as shown here for the empirical Ball‐Berry slope, overcoming constraints imposed by inflexibilities in current global calibration methods.
- Subjects
PHOTOSYNTHESIS; CARBON dioxide; EVAPOTRANSPIRATION; BIOGEOCHEMICAL cycles; ATMOSPHERIC carbon dioxide
- Publication
Global Change Biology, 2018, Vol 24, Issue 12, p5708
- ISSN
1354-1013
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/gcb.14445