Bond-Lamberty, Ben, Stith T. Gower and Douglas E. Ahl. 2007. Improved simulation of poorly drained forests using Biome-BGC. Tree Physiol. 27, 703-715.
downloadFebruary 2007 Archives
Summary Forested wetlands and peatlands are
important in boreal and terrestrial biogeochemical cycling, but most
general-purpose forest process models are designed and parameterized for
upland systems. We describe changes made to Biome-BGC, an
ecophysiological process model, that improve its ability to simulate
poorly drained forests. Model changes allowed for: (1) lateral water
inflow from a surrounding watershed, and variable surface and subsurface
drainage; (2) adverse effects of anoxic soil on decomposition and
nutrient mineralization; (3) closure of leaf stomata in flooded soils;
and (4) growth of nonvascular plants (i.e., bryophytes). Bryophytes were
treated as ectohydric broadleaf evergreen plants with zero stomatal
conductance, whose cuticular conductance to CO2 was dependent on plant
water content. Individual model changes were parameterized with
published data, and ecosystem-level model performance was assessed by
comparing simulated output to field data from the northern BOREAS site
in Manitoba, Canada. The simulation of the poorly drained forest model
exhibited reduced decomposition and vascular plant growth (-90%)
compared with that of the well-drained forest model; the integrated
bryophyte photosynthetic response accorded well with published data.
Simulated net primary production, biomass and soil carbon accumulation
broadly agreed with field measurements, although simulated net primary
production was higher than observed data in well-drained stands.
Simulated net primary production in the poorly drained forest was most
sensitive to oxygen restriction on soil processes, and secondarily to
stomatal closure in flooded conditions. The modified Biome-BGC remains
unable to simulate true wetlands that are subject to prolonged flooding,
because it does not track organic soil formation, water table changes,
soil redox potential or anaerobic processes.

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