Nitrogen allocation modelling for ecohydrological application: Role of
photosynthetic nitrogen in C4 crops under climate change
Abstract
Nitrogen is a major constituent of proteins and enzymes that regulates
photosynthetic capacity in plants. We use a novel approach for nitrogen
allocation (N-allocation) that aims to maximize photosynthesis by
allocating nitrogen in plant leaves in two steps: (i). vertical
distribution of leaf nitrogen based on an optimal exponential
distribution through the vertical canopy structure, and (ii). balancing
the leaf-level nitrogen between chlorophyll and rubisco to maintain the
photosynthetic rate. We incorporated this N-allocation approach in a
multilayer canopy‐soil‐root system model (MLCan) that was then validated
for maize (C4) using observed data at Urbana, Illinois, USA. The model
evaluation shows that the N-allocation method established the coupling
between ecohydrological processes and soil-nitrogen dynamics. The
simulation results indicated the strength of feedback between leaf-level
nitrogen and eco-physiological processes. This relationship was affected
by changes in the fertilizers and key climatic variables such as
CO2, precipitation and ambient temperature. The
sensitivity of temperature increased after the implication of the
N-allocation method. The vertical profiles of net photosynthetic rate
(An) were resolved based on the vertical distribution of
photosynthetic nitrogen. The increase in temperature lowered the
vertical gradient of photosynthetic nitrogen and in response, the
vertical profile of was reformed.