Abstract
Nitrogen controls on the seasonal and inter-annual variations in evapotranspiration in a temperate Pacific Northwest Douglas-fir forest in British Columbia, Canada, were studied using a coupled carbon and nitrogen (C&N) model developed by incorporating plant-soil nitrogen cycling algorithms in the Carbon-Canadian Land Surface Scheme (default C-CLASS). In the coupled C&N-CLASS, the maximum carboxylation rate of Rubisco (Vcmax) is determined nonlinearly from the modeled leaf Rubisco-nitrogen, rather than being prescribed. Hence, variations in canopy assimilation, stomatal conductance and evapotranspiration are sensitive to leaf nitrogen status through Rubisco activity. Model output from both default and coupled versions was compared with eddy covariance water vapor flux measurements made over a 5-year period (1998-2002) in this forest. Incorporation of leaf Rubisco-N modulated photosynthesis algorithms, which interact with canopy conductance and other soil-plant N cycling processes, improved canopy transpiration simulations (about 10% higher than from the default model) and thus latent heat flux (half-hourly and monthly), particularly during the main growing seasons. Values of soil moisture simulated using the coupled model were in better agreement with observations than those using the default model. Compared to the observed evapotranspiration values of 432, 435, 415, 382 and 388 mm for 1998-2002, respectively, coupled C&N model simulated annual values were 380, 398, 382, 403 and 386 mm, while the default model's were 357, 375, 363, 386 and 374 mm for respective years. The coupled C&N land surface model framework will be a useful tool for evaluating impacts of nitrogen cycle on evapotranspiration and energy fluxes from terrestrial ecosystems and its feedbacks on Earth's climate system.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 331-347 |
Number of pages | 17 |
Journal | Ecological Modelling |
Volume | 201 |
Issue number | 3-4 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Mar 10 2007 |
Externally published | Yes |
Funding
This research was supported by the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences (CFCAS), Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) and BIOCAP Canada Foundation through Canadian Global Coupled Carbon Climate Modeling (CGC3M) and Fluxnet-Canada Research Networks (FCRN). Support from Canadian Foundation for Innovation (CFI), Ontario Innovation Trust (OIT) and SHARCNET is also acknowledged. We thank Diana Verseghy, Nigel Roulet, Ken Denman, Robert Grant for their advice. We acknowledge Zoran Nesic, Elyn Humphreys and other members of the Biometeorology and Soil Physics Group, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, for observed data collection and analysis at the Campbell River site.
Keywords
- Canadian Land Surface Scheme
- Douglas-fir forest
- Eddy covariance fluxes
- Evapotranspiration
- Latent heat flux
- Nitrogen cycle