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Title: | A model-data comparison of gross primary productivity: Results from the North American Carbon Program site synthesis |
Authors: | Schaefer, Kevin Schwalm, Christopher R. Williams, Chris Arain, M. Altaf Barr, Alan Hollinger, David Y. Humphreys, Elyn Poulter, Benjamin Raczka, Brett M. Richardson, Andrew D. Sahoo, Alok Thornton, Peter Vargas, Rodrigo Verbeeck, Hans Anderson, Ryan Baker, Ian Andrew Black, T. Bolstad, Paul Chen, Jiquan Curtis, Peter S. Desai, Ankur R. Dietze, Michael Dragoni, Danilo Gough, Christopher Grant, Robert F. Gu, Lianhong Jain, Atul Kucharik, Chris Law, Beverly Liu, Shuguang Lokipitiya, E.Y.K Margolis, Hank A. Matamala, Roser McCaughey, J. Harry Monson, Russ Munge, J. William Oechel, Walter Peng, Changhui Price, David T. Ricciuto, Dan Riley, William J. Roulet, Nigel Tian, Hanqin Tonitto, Christina Torn, Margaret Weng, Ensheng Zhou, Xiaolu |
Issue Date: | 2012 |
Publisher: | ResearchGate |
Citation: | Schaefer, K., et al. (2012), A model-data comparison of gross primary productivity: Results from the North American Carbon Program site synthesis, J. Geophys. Res., 117, G03010, doi:10.1029/2012JG001960. |
Abstract: | Accurately simulating gross primary productivity (GPP) in terrestrial ecosystem models is critical because errors in simulated GPP propagate through the model to introduce additional errors in simulated biomass and other fluxes. We evaluated simulated, daily average GPP from 26 models against estimated GPP at 39 eddy covariance flux tower sites across the United States and Canada. None of the models in this study match estimated GPP within observed uncertainty. On average, models overestimate GPP in winter, spring, and fall, and underestimate GPP in summer. Models overpredicted GPP under dry conditions and for temperatures below 0 C. Improvements in simulated soil moisture and ecosystem response to drought or humidity stress will improve simulated GPP under dry conditions. Adding a low-temperature response to shut down GPP for temperatures below 0 C will reduce the positive bias in winter, spring, and fall and improve simulated phenology. The negative bias in summer and poor overall performance resulted from mismatches between simulated and observed light use efficiency (LUE). Improving simulated GPP requires better leaf-to-canopy scaling and better values of model parameters that control the maximum potential GPP, such as ɛmax (LUE), Vcmax (unstressed Rubisco catalytic capacity) or Jmax (the maximum electron transport rate). |
URI: | https://www.researchgate.net/publication/259802729 http://archive.cmb.ac.lk:8080/xmlui/handle/70130/5440 |
Appears in Collections: | Department of Zoology |
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A model-data comparison of gross primary productivity Results from the North American Carbon Program site synthesis.pdf | 655.85 kB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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