Litcius/Paper detail

Integrated modeling of canopy photosynthesis, fluorescence, and the transfer of energy, mass, and momentum in the soil–plant–atmosphere continuum (STEMMUS–SCOPE v1.0.0)

Yunfei Wang, Yijian Zeng, Lianyu Yu, Peiqi Yang, Christiaan van der Tol, Qiang Yu, Xiaoliang Lü, Huanjie Cai, Zhongbo Su

2021Geoscientific model development50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract. Root water uptake by plants is a vital process that influences terrestrial energy, water, and carbon exchanges. At the soil, vegetation, and atmosphere interfaces, root water uptake and solar radiation predominantly regulate the dynamics and health of vegetation growth, which can be remotely monitored by satellites, using the soil–plant relationship proxy – solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence. However, most current canopy photosynthesis and fluorescence models do not account for root water uptake, which compromises their applications under water-stressed conditions. To address this limitation, this study integrated photosynthesis, fluorescence emission, and transfer of energy, mass, and momentum in the soil–plant–atmosphere continuum system, via a simplified 1D root growth model and a resistance scheme linking soil, roots, leaves, and the atmosphere. The coupled model was evaluated with field measurements of maize and grass canopies. The results indicated that the simulation of land surface fluxes was significantly improved by the coupled model, especially when the canopy experienced moderate water stress. This finding highlights the importance of enhanced soil heat and moisture transfer, as well as dynamic root growth, on simulating ecosystem functioning.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental scienceCanopyPhotosynthesisChlorophyll fluorescenceAtmospheric sciencesAtmosphere (unit)Water contentSoil scienceBotanyGeologyMeteorologyPhysicsBiologyGeotechnical engineeringPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsIrrigation Practices and Water ManagementGreenhouse Technology and Climate Control