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Improvement of modeling plant responses to low soil moisture in JULESvn4.9 and evaluation against flux tower measurements

Harper, Anna B. (author)
University of Exeter
Williams, Karina E. (author)
Met Office,University of Exeter
Mcguire, Patrick C. (author)
University of Reading
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Duran Rojas, Maria Carolina (author)
University of Exeter
Hemming, Debbie (author)
Met Office,University of Birmingham
Verhoef, Anne (author)
University of Reading
Huntingford, Chris (author)
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Wallingford
Rowland, Lucy (author)
University of Exeter
Marthews, Toby (author)
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Wallingford
Breder Eller, Cleiton (author)
University of Campinas
Mathison, Camilla (author)
Met Office
Nobrega, Rodolfo L.B. (author)
Imperial College London
Gedney, Nicola (author)
Met Office
Vidale, Pier Luigi (author)
University of Reading
Otu-Larbi, Fred (author)
Lancaster University
Pandey, Divya (author)
University of York
Garrigues, Sebastien (author)
European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts
Wright, Azin (author)
University of Reading
Slevin, Darren (author)
Forest Research, Northern Research Station
De Kauwe, Martin G. (author)
University of New South Wales,Centre of Excellence for Climate Extremes (CLEX)
Blyth, Eleanor (author)
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Wallingford
Ardo¨, Jonas (author)
Lund University,Lunds universitet,BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate,Centrum för miljö- och klimatvetenskap (CEC),Naturvetenskapliga fakulteten,Institutionen för naturgeografi och ekosystemvetenskap,Centre for Environmental and Climate Science (CEC),Faculty of Science,Dept of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science
Black, Andrew (author)
University of British Columbia
Bonal, Damien (author)
University of Lorraine
Buchmann, Nina (author)
ETH Zürich
Burban, Benoit (author)
Agricultural research for develompent (CIRAD),University Of Antilles
Fuchs, Kathrin (author)
ETH Zürich,Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
De Grandcourt, Agnès (author)
Agricultural research for develompent (CIRAD)
Mammarella, Ivan (author)
University of Helsinki
Merbold, Lutz (author)
International Livestock Research Institute Nairobi
Montagnani, Leonardo (author)
Free University of Bozen-Bolzano,Forest Services, Autonomous Province of Bolzano
Nouvellon, Yann (author)
Agricultural research for develompent (CIRAD)
Restrepo-Coupe, Natalia (author)
University of Arizona,University of Technology Sydney
Wohlfahrt, Georg (author)
University of Innsbruck
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 (creator_code:org_t)
2021-06-03
2021
English 26 s.
In: Geoscientific Model Development. - : Copernicus GmbH. - 1991-959X .- 1991-9603. ; 14:6, s. 3269-3294
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
Abstract Subject headings
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  • Drought is predicted to increase in the future due to climate change, bringing with it myriad impacts on ecosystems. Plants respond to drier soils by reducing stomatal conductance in order to conserve water and avoid hydraulic damage. Despite the importance of plant drought responses for the global carbon cycle and local and regional climate feedbacks, land surface models are unable to capture observed plant responses to soil moisture stress. We assessed the impact of soil moisture stress on simulated gross primary productivity (GPP) and latent energy flux (LE) in the Joint UK Land Environment Simulator (JULES) vn4.9 on seasonal and annual timescales and evaluated 10 different representations of soil moisture stress in the model. For the default configuration, GPP was more realistic in temperate biome sites than in the tropics or high-latitude (cold-region) sites, while LE was best simulated in temperate and high-latitude (cold) sites. Errors that were not due to soil moisture stress, possibly linked to phenology, contributed to model biases for GPP in tropical savanna and deciduous forest sites. We found that three alternative approaches to calculating soil moisture stress produced more realistic results than the default parameterization for most biomes and climates. All of these involved increasing the number of soil layers from 4 to 14 and the soil depth from 3.0 to 10.8 m. In addition, we found improvements when soil matric potential replaced volumetric water content in the stress equation (the "soil14_psi" experiments), when the critical threshold value for inducing soil moisture stress was reduced ("soil14_p0"), and when plants were able to access soil moisture in deeper soil layers ("soil14_dr&z.ast;2"). For LE, the biases were highest in the default configuration in temperate mixed forests, with overestimation occurring during most of the year. At these sites, reducing soil moisture stress (with the new parameterizations mentioned above) increased LE and increased model biases but improved the simulated seasonal cycle and brought the monthly variance closer to the measured variance of LE. Further evaluation of the reason for the high bias in LE at many of the sites would enable improvements in both carbon and energy fluxes with new parameterizations for soil moisture stress. Increasing the soil depth and plant access to deep soil moisture improved many aspects of the simulations, and we recommend these settings in future work using JULES or as a general way to improve land surface carbon and water fluxes in other models. In addition, using soil matric potential presents the opportunity to include plant functional type-specific parameters to further improve modeled fluxes.

Subject headings

LANTBRUKSVETENSKAPER  -- Lantbruksvetenskap, skogsbruk och fiske -- Markvetenskap (hsv//swe)
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES  -- Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries -- Soil Science (hsv//eng)

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