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Library comparison of alternative modelling approaches to evaluate the European forest carbon fluxes

comparison of alternative modelling approaches to evaluate the European forest carbon fluxes

comparison of alternative modelling approaches to evaluate the European forest carbon fluxes

Resource information

Date of publication
декабря 2010
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
AGRIS:US201301856019
Pages
241-251

The European forest carbon balance studied by various methods shows different results. We compared the regional and national net primary production (NPP) estimated by the forest inventory-based model EFISCEN and the climate-based terrestrial ecosystem models (TEMs: BIOME-BGC, ORCHIDEE, and JULES), and single forests NPP derived from the international network of eddy-covariance towers (FLUXNET). In addition, the paper presents the net ecosystem production (NEP) and the net biome production (NBP) calculated with EFISCEN and discusses the influence of forest management onto carbon fluxes. We aimed to better understand the variance between EFISCEN and TEMs NPP estimates, and to improve the assessment of European forest mitigation potential for the year 2005. The NPP comparison between the EFISCEN inventory method and the TEMs process-based method showed similar average values for Europe and its countries. The European NPP average 508±183 (±standard deviation) gC/m²/year of EFISCEN was close to 487±126gC/m²/year of TEMs. The country level average EFISCEN-TEMs difference was just 57±153gC/m²/year. Larger differences were apparent at the regional level for the species groups. Especially for coniferous forests, EFISCEN projected higher values (NPP maximum 1480gC/m²/year) than TEMs (NPP reaching saturation below 700gC/m²/year). Compared to regional TEMs NPP across Europe, the range of regional EFISCEN NPP was consistently larger and with larger variance. Regionally EFISCEN and TEMs NPP averages were close to the individual FLUXNET data. Similar to broadleaves of TEMs, the FLUXNET broadleaves NPP were more productive compared to coniferous forests. We conclude that the two methods produce similar results, except for higher regional EFISCEN NPP of coniferous forests. The NPP difference between modelling methods was presumably result of TEMs assuming mature steady state forests, and lacking the distribution of highly productive and abundant intermediate age classes (integrated into EFISCEN). Both approaches have their advantages; TEMs include climate and environmental change, whereas EFISCEN includes past and current management. Combining the two approaches will allow more accurate assessment of the forest carbon balance, including direct and indirect human effects.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Ťupek, Boris
Zanchi, Giuliana
Verkerk, Pieter J.
Churkina, Galina
Viovy, Nicolas
Hughes, John K.
Lindner, Marcus

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Data Provider
Geographical focus