Abstract

Estimating net primary productivity (NPP) is significant in global climate change research and carbon cycle. However, there are many uncertainties in different NPP modeling results and the process of NPP is challenging to model on the absence of data. In this study, we used meteorological data as input to simulate vegetation NPP through climate-based model, synthetic model and CASA model. Then, the results from three models were compared with MODIS NPP and observed data over China from 2000 to 2015. The statistics evaluation metrics (Relative Bias (RB), Pearson linear Correlation Coefficient (CC), Root Mean Square Error (RMSE), and Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency coefficient (NSE)) between simulated NPP and MODIS NPP were calculated. The results implied that the CASA-model performed better than the other two models in terms of RB, RMSE, NSE and CC whether on the national or the regional scale. It has a higher CC with 0.51 and a smaller RMSE with 111.96 g C·m-2·yr-1 in the whole country. The synthetic model and CASA-model has the same advantages at some regions, and there are lower RMSE in Southern China (86.35 g C·m-2·yr-1), Xinjiang (85.53 g C·m-2·yr-1) and Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (93.22 g C·m-2·yr-1). The climate-based model has widespread overestimation and large systematic errors, along with worse performances (NSEmax = 0.45) and other metric indexes unsatisfactory, especially Qinghai-Tibet Plateau with relatively lower accuracy because of the unavailable observation data. Overall, the CASA-model is much more ideal for estimating NPP all over China in the absence of data. This study provides a comprehensive intercomparison of different NPP-simulated models and can provide powerful help for researchers to select the appropriate NPP evaluation model.

Highlights

  • net primary productivity (NPP) is the amount of organic matter produced by photosynthesis minus autotrophic respiration, which is defined as the net amount of organic matter fixed by plants through photosynthesis

  • The results showed that the simulated NPP in each province from 2000 to 2015 using the three models in this study are highly correlated with the result of Luo during 1989 to 1993 (Fig 4B)

  • We compared the NPP calculated from the three models with other simulation results (Table 1), which indicated the reliability of our results

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Summary

Introduction

NPP is the amount of organic matter produced by photosynthesis minus autotrophic respiration, which is defined as the net amount of organic matter fixed by plants through photosynthesis. It represents the net carbon flow from the atmosphere to the terrestrial ecosystems and is affected by many factors, such as climate, soil, nutrients and CO2 [1,2,3].

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