Testing the applicability of BIOME-BGC to simulate beech gross primary production in Europe using a new continental weather dataset

2016 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Testing the applicability of BIOME-BGC to simulate beech gross primary production in Europe using a new continental weather dataset​
Chiesi, M.; Chirici, G.; Marchetti, M.; Hasenauer, H.; Moreno, A.; Knohl, A.   & Matteucci, G. et al.​ (2016) 
Annals of Forest Science73(3) pp. 713​-727​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13595-016-0560-7 

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Authors
Chiesi, Marta; Chirici, Gherardo; Marchetti, Marco; Hasenauer, Hubert; Moreno, Adam; Knohl, Alexander ; Matteucci, Giorgio; Pilegaard, Kim; Granier, André; Longdoz, Bernard; Maselli, Fabio
Abstract
Key message A daily 1-km Pan-European weather dataset can drive the BIOME-BGC model for the estimation of current and future beech gross primary production (GPP). Annual beech GPP is affected primarily by spring temperature and more irregularly by summer water stress. Context The spread of beech forests in Europe enhances the importance of modelling and monitoring their growth in view of ongoing climate changes. Aims The current paper assesses the capability of a biogeochemical model to simulate beech gross primary production (GPP) using a Pan-European 1-km weather dataset. Methods The model BIOME-BGC is applied in four European forest ecosystems having different climatic conditions where the eddy covariance technique is used to measure water and carbon fluxes. The experiment is in three main steps. First, the accuracy of BIOME-BGC GPP simulations is assessed through comparison with flux observations. Second, the influence of two major meteorological drivers (spring minimum temperature and growing season dryness) on observed and simulated inter-annual GPP variations is analysed. Lastly, the impacts of two climate change scenarios on beech GPP are evaluated through statistical analyses of the ground data and model simulations. Results The weather dataset can drive BIOME-BGC to simulate most of the beech GPP evolution in all four test areas. Both observed and simulated inter-annual GPP variations are mainly dependent on minimum temperature around the beginning of the growing season, while spring/summer dryness exerts a secondary role. BIOME-BGC can also reasonably predict the impacts of the examined climate change scenarios. Conclusion The proposed modelling approach is capable of approximately reproducing spatial and temporal beech GPP variations and impacts of expected climate changes in the examined European sites.
Issue Date
2016
Journal
Annals of Forest Science 
Organization
Fakultät für Forstwissenschaften und Waldökologie ; Büsgen-Institut ; Abteilung Bioklimatologie 
ISSN
1286-4560
Language
English

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