Abstract

Stomatal conductance (gs) and compensatory water uptake (CWU) are crucial processes in land surface models, as they directly influence the exchange of carbon and water fluxes between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere. In this study, we integrated a new stomatal scheme derived from optimal stomatal theory (Medlyn's gs model), and an empirical CWU scheme into the Common Land Model (CoLM). Assessing the impacts on modeling gross primary productivity (GPP) and latent flux (LE) through observations obtained from eddy covariance (EC) measurements at three forest sites in China. Our results show that replacing the Ball-Berry's gs model (termed BB) with Medlyn's gs model (termed MED) did not bring about significant changes (had neutral impacts) in the performance of CoLM simulations at three forest sites. Considering the climate factors of annual mean precipitation to optimize key fitting parameters in gs exhibited improvement in model simulations. The average coefficient of determination (R2) achieved to 0.65 for GPP and LE at three sites, and the normalized root mean squared error (NRMSE) decreased from 0.83 to 0.77 at those sites. Besides, incorporating CWU into the model improved its performance. The R2 increased to 0.84 and RMSE decreased to 4.84 μmol m−2 s−1 for GPP, and the R2 increased to 0.62 and RMSE decreased to 55.64 W m−2 for LE. Therefore, modifying the model process of both contributed more to enhancing the model simulations than relying solely on one of these functions. Our study highlights that the response of plant functional types (PFTs) to water stress can be effectively represented in gs models when coupled with biochemical capacity to quantify carbon and water fluxes in forest ecosystems or other ecosystems.

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