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146 pages
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Size: 630k
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Modeling Carbon Fluxes, Net Primary Production, and Light Utilization in Boreal Forest Stands
Institution: | University of Maryland |
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Advisor(s): | Stephen D. Prince, |
Degree: | Ph.D., Geography |
Year: | 1997 |
Volume: | 146 pages |
ISBN-10: | 0965856453 |
ISBN-13: | 9780965856454 |
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The use of satellite remote sensing for modeling net primary production (NPP) was evaluated in sixty boreal forest stands spanning a range of site conditions.
The work included: (i) estimating annual phenological dynamics and photosynthetically
active radiation (PAR) interception with remotely sensed spectral measurements,
(ii) linking annually absorbed PAR (APAR) to measured NPP and quantifying
variability in light use efficiency ("En"), (iii) evaluating
sources of variability in "En" via mechanistic modeling of ecophysiology
and associated carbon fluxes, particularly through analyses of respiratory
carbon costs in relation to assimilation gains (the R:A ratio), (iv) assessing
generalization of the results through an investigation of the evidence
for evolutionary convergence in "En", the R:A ratio and assimilation
per unit APAR (Eg).
The analyses showed that observed variability in "En" reflects
a decoupling of PAR harvesting and utilization, primarily as a result of
differences in the R:A ratio. Links between "En", the R:A ratio
and standing above-ground biomass were related to differences the carbon
(energy) costs associated with synthesis and maintenance of plant constituents,
and longevity (i.e. the payback period on investment in carbon gain). Estimating
the R:A ratio from above-ground biomass, in order to compensate for variability
in "En", was found to be problematic owing primarily to covariation
of R and A with the amount of respiring biomass (i.e. sapwood and foliage).
The analyses also showed that the differences in carbon costs between functional
types (plants with related life history traits) resulted in convergence
on "Eg" rather than en. Variability in "Eg" was, however,
introduced by stomatal control at some stressed sites. These findings were
supported by the remote sensing and simulation modeling results, and the
synthesis of work related to evolutionary ecology.
The primary conclusions are that variability in light utilization in these
boreal forest stands was determined largely by respiratory carbon costs,
and that NPP models based on light harvesting require augmentation with
terms that reflect PAR utilization. Possible methods to address these issues,
and their implications for NPP modeling over large areas, are discussed.
146 pages
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Size: 630k
Download a sample of the first 25 pages