General Overview


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This report is the result of the use of the Python 3.4 package Sympy (for symbolic mathematics), as means to translate published models to a common language. It was created by Verónika Ceballos-Núñez (Orcid ID: 0000-0002-0046-1160) on 26/1/2016, and was last modified on lm.

About the model

The model depicted in this document considers carbon allocation with a process based approach. It was originally described by Foley et al. (1996).

Abstract

Here we present a new terrestrial biosphere model (the Integrated Biosphere Simulator - IBIS) which demonstrates how land surface biophysics, terrestrial carbon fluxes, and global vegetation dynamics can be represented in a single, physically consistent modeling framework. In order to integrate a wide range of biophysical, physiological, and ecological processes, the model is designed around a hicrarchical, modular structure and uses a common state description throughout. First, a coupled simulation of the surface water, energy, and carbon fluxes is performed on hourly timesteps and is integrated over the year to estimate the annual water and carbon balance. Next, the annual carbon balance is used to predict changes in the leaf area index and biomass for each of nine plant functional types, which compete for light and water using different ecological strategies. The resulting patterns of annual evapotranspiration, runoff, and net primary productivity are in good agreement with observations. In addition, the model simulates patterns of vegetation dynamics that qualitatively agree with features of the natural process of secondary succession. Comparison of the model's inferred near- equilibrium vegetation categories with a potential natural vegetation map shows a fair degree of agreement. This integrated modeling framework provides a means of simulating hoth rapid biophysical processes and long-term ecosystem dynamics that can be directly incorporated within atmospheric models.

Space Scale

global

Available parameter values

Information on given parameter sets
Abbreviation Source
Tropical evergreen trees Foley et al. (1996)

State Variables

The following table contains the available information regarding this section:

Information on State Variables
Name Description
\(C_{il}\) Carbon in leaves of plant functional type (PFT) i
\(C_{is}\) Carbon in transport tissue (mainly stems) of PFT\(_i\)
\(C_{ir}\) Carbon in fine roots of PFT\(_i\)

Photosynthetic Parameters

The following table contains the available information regarding this section:

Information on Photosynthetic Parameters
Name Description Type Values

Tropical evergreen trees
\(NPP_{i}\) Net Primary Production for PFT\(_i\) variable -

Allocation Coefficients

The following table contains the available information regarding this section:

Information on Allocation Coefficients
Name Description Type Values

Tropical evergreen trees
\(a_{il}\) Fraction of annual NPP allocated to leaves for PFT\(_i\) parameter \(0.25\)
\(a_{is}\) Fraction of annual NPP allocated to stem for PFT\(_i\) parameter \(0.5\)
\(a_{ir}\) Fraction of annual NPP allocated to roots for PFT\(_i\) parameter \(0.25\)

Cycling Rates

The following table contains the available information regarding this section:

Information on Cycling Rates
Name Description Type Values

Tropical evergreen trees
\(\tau_{il}\) Residence time of carbon in leaves for PFT\(_i\) parameter -
\(\tau_{is}\) Residence time of carbon in stem for PFT\(_i\) parameter -
\(\tau_{ir}\) Residence time of carbon in roots for PFT\(_i\) parameter -

Components

The following table contains the available information regarding this section:

Information on Components
Name Description Expressions
\(x\) vector of states for vegetation \(x=\left[\begin{matrix}C_{il}\\C_{is}\\C_{ir}\end{matrix}\right]\)
\(u\) scalar function of photosynthetic inputs \(u=NPP_{i}\)
\(b\) vector of partitioning coefficients of photosynthetically fixed carbon \(b=\left[\begin{matrix}a_{il}\\a_{is}\\a_{ir}\end{matrix}\right]\)
\(A\) matrix of turnover (cycling) rates \(A=\left[\begin{matrix}-\frac{1}{\tau_{il}} & 0 & 0\\0 & -\frac{1}{\tau_{is}} & 0\\0 & 0 & -\frac{1}{\tau_{ir}}\end{matrix}\right]\)
\(f_{v}\) the righthandside of the ode \(f_{v}=u\,b+A\,x\)

Pool model representation

Flux description

Figure 1
Figure 1: Pool model representation

Input fluxes

\(C_{il}: NPP_{i}\cdot a_{il}\)
\(C_{is}: NPP_{i}\cdot a_{is}\)
\(C_{ir}: NPP_{i}\cdot a_{ir}\)

Output fluxes

\(C_{il}: \frac{C_{il}}{\tau_{il}}\)
\(C_{is}: \frac{C_{is}}{\tau_{is}}\)
\(C_{ir}: \frac{C_{ir}}{\tau_{ir}}\)

The right hand side of the ODE

\(\left[\begin{matrix}-\frac{C_{il}}{\tau_{il}} + NPP_{i}\cdot a_{il}\\-\frac{C_{is}}{\tau_{is}} + NPP_{i}\cdot a_{is}\\-\frac{C_{ir}}{\tau_{ir}} + NPP_{i}\cdot a_{ir}\end{matrix}\right]\)

The Jacobian (derivative of the ODE w.r.t. state variables)

\(\left[\begin{matrix}-\frac{1}{\tau_{il}} & 0 & 0\\0 & -\frac{1}{\tau_{is}} & 0\\0 & 0 & -\frac{1}{\tau_{ir}}\end{matrix}\right]\)

Steady state formulas

\(C_{il} = NPP_{i}\cdot a_{il}\cdot\tau_{il}\)
\(C_{is} = NPP_{i}\cdot a_{is}\cdot\tau_{is}\)
\(C_{ir} = NPP_{i}\cdot a_{ir}\cdot\tau_{ir}\)

Steady states (potentially incomplete), according jacobian eigenvalues, damping ratio

Parameter set: Tropical evergreen trees

\(C_il: 0.25\cdot NPP_{i}\cdot\tau_{il}\), \(C_is: 0.5\cdot NPP_{i}\cdot\tau_{is}\), \(C_ir: 0.25\cdot NPP_{i}\cdot\tau_{ir}\)

\(\lambda_{1}: -\frac{1}{\tau_{is}}\)
\(\lambda_{2}: -\frac{1}{\tau_{ir}}\)
\(\lambda_{3}: -\frac{1}{\tau_{il}}\)

References

Foley, J. A., Prentice, I. C., Ramankutty, N., Lewis, S., Pollard, D., Sitch, S., & Haxeltine, A. (1996). An integrated biosphere model of land surface processes, terrestrial carbon balance, and vegetation dynamics. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 10, 603–628. http://doi.org/10.1029/96GB02692