Ozone-induced reductions in photosynthesis and transpiration: Parameterizing the Community Land Model (CLM)
Abstract
Humans are indirectly increasing concentrations of surface ozone (O3) through industrial processes. Ozone is known to have negative impacts on plants, including reductions in crop yields, plant growth, and visible leaf injury. Research also suggests that O3 exposure differentially affects photosynthesis and transpiration because biochemical aspects of photosynthesis are damaged in addition to stomatal conductance, the common link that controls both processes. However, most models incorporate O3 damage as a decrease in photosynthesis, with stomatal conductance responding linearly through the coupling of photosynthesis and conductance calculations. The observed differential effects of O3 on photosynthesis and conductance are not explicitly expressed in most modeling efforts, potentially causing larger decreases in transpiration. We ran five independent simulations of the CLM that compare current methods of incorporating O3 as a decrease in photosynthesis to a new method of separating photosynthesis and transpiration responses to O3 by independently modifying each parameter. We also determine the magnitude of both direct decreases to photosynthesis and transpiration and decreases caused by feedbacks in each parameter. Results show that traditional methods of modeling O3 effects by decreasing photosynthesis cause linear decreases in predicted transpiration that are ~20% larger than observed decreases in transpiration. However, modeled decreases in photosynthesis and transpiration that are incorporated independently of one another predict observed decreases in photosynthesis and improve transpiration predictions by ~13%. Therefore, models best predict carbon and water fluxes when incorporating O3-induced decreases in photosynthesis and transpiration independently.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2010
- Bibcode:
- 2010AGUFM.B21A0304L
- Keywords:
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- 0426 BIOGEOSCIENCES / Biosphere/atmosphere interactions;
- 0428 BIOGEOSCIENCES / Carbon cycling;
- 0466 BIOGEOSCIENCES / Modeling;
- 0478 BIOGEOSCIENCES / Pollution: urban;
- regional and global