Development of the SSiB5/TRIFFID/DayCent-SOM Model and study of the
impacts of nitrogen dynamics on terrestrial carbon cycle
Abstract
Plant and microbial nitrogen (N) dynamics and nitrogen availability
regulate the photosynthetic capacity and capture, allocation, turnover
of carbon (C) in terrestrial ecosystem. It is important to adequately
represent plant N processes in land surface models. In this study, a
plant C-N framework was developed by coupling a biophysical and dynamic
land surface processes model, SSiB4/TRIFFID, with a soil organic matter
cycling model, DayCent-SOM, to fully incorporate N regulations to
investigate the impact of N on plant growth and C cycling. To
incorporate the N limitation in the coupled system, the parameterization
for dynamic C/N ratios for each plant functional type (PFT) was
developed first. Then, after accounting for plant/soil N-cycling, when
available N is less than demand, N would restrict the plant growth,
reducing the net primary productivity (NPP), but also impact plant
respiration rates and phenology. The improvements of the newly-developed
model, the SSiB5/TRIFFID/DayCent-SOM, was preliminary verified at three
flux tower sites with different PFTs. Furthermore, several offline
global simulations were conducted from 1948 to 2007 to predict the
long-term mean vegetation distribution and terrestrial C cycling, and
the results are evaluated with satellite-derived observational data. The
sensitivity of the terrestrial C cycle to N processes is also assessed.
In general, new model can better reproduce observed emergent properties,
including gross primary productivity (GPP), leaf area index (LAI), and
respiration. The main improvements occur in tropical Africa and boreal
regions, accompanied by a decrease of the bias in global GPP and LAI by
16.3% and 27.1%, respectively.