Improved representation of plant functional types and physiology in the Joint UK Land Environment Simulator (JULES v4.2) using plant trait information
Loading...
Date
Authors
Harper, Anna B.
Cox, Peter M.
Friedlingstein, Pierre
Wiltshire, Andy J.
Jones, Chris D.
Sitch, Stephen
Mercado, Lina M.
Groenendijk, Margriet
Robertson, Eddy
Kattge, Jens
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Copernicus Publications
Abstract
Dynamic global vegetation models are used to
predict the response of vegetation to climate change. They
are essential for planning ecosystem management, understanding
carbon cycle–climate feedbacks, and evaluating the
potential impacts of climate change on global ecosystems.
JULES (the Joint UK Land Environment Simulator) represents
terrestrial processes in the UK Hadley Centre family
of models and in the first generation UK Earth System
Model. Previously, JULES represented five plant functional
types (PFTs): broadleaf trees, needle-leaf trees, C3 and C4
grasses, and shrubs. This study addresses three developments
in JULES. First, trees and shrubs were split into deciduous
and evergreen PFTs to better represent the range of leaf life
spans and metabolic capacities that exists in nature. Second,
we distinguished between temperate and tropical broadleaf
evergreen trees. These first two changes result in a new set of
nine PFTs: tropical and temperate broadleaf evergreen trees,
broadleaf deciduous trees, needle-leaf evergreen and deciduous
trees, C3 and C4 grasses, and evergreen and deciduous
shrubs. Third, using data from the TRY database, we updated
the relationship between leaf nitrogen and the maximum rate
of carboxylation of Rubisco (Vcmax/, and updated the leaf turnover and growth rates to include a trade-off between leaf
life span and leaf mass per unit area.
Overall, the simulation of gross and net primary productivity
(GPP and NPP, respectively) is improved with the nine
PFTs when compared to FLUXNET sites, a global GPP data
set based on FLUXNET, and MODIS NPP. Compared to the
standard five PFTs, the new nine PFTs simulate a higher GPP
and NPP, with the exception of C3 grasses in cold environments
and C4 grasses that were previously over-productive.
On a biome scale, GPP is improved for all eight biomes evaluated
and NPP is improved for most biomes – the exceptions
being the tropical forests, savannahs, and extratropical
mixed forests where simulated NPP is too high. With the
new PFTs, the global present-day GPP and NPP are 128 and
62 PgC year1, respectively. We conclude that the inclusion
of trait-based data and the evergreen/deciduous distinction
has substantially improved productivity fluxes in JULES, in
particular the representation of GPP. These developments increase
the realism of JULES, enabling higher confidence in
simulations of vegetation dynamics and carbon storage.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Geoscientific Model Development
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access