Abstract

Abstract. Modeling vegetation photosynthesis is essential for understanding carbon exchanges between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere. The radiative transfer process within plant canopies is one of the key drivers that regulate canopy photosynthesis. Most vegetation cover consists of discrete plant crowns, of which the physical observation departs from the underlying assumption of a homogenous and uniform medium in classic radiative transfer theory. Here we advance the Geometric Optical Radiative Transfer (GORT) model to simulate photosynthesis activities for discontinuous plant canopies. We separate radiation absorption into two components that are absorbed by sunlit and shaded leaves, and derive analytical solutions by integrating over the canopy layer. To model leaf-level and canopy-level photosynthesis, leaf light absorption is then linked to the biochemical process of gas diffusion through leaf stomata. The canopy gap probability derived from GORT differs from classic radiative transfer theory, especially when the leaf area index is high, due to leaf clumping effects. Tree characteristics such as tree density, crown shape, and canopy length affect leaf clumping and regulate radiation interception. Modeled gross primary production (GPP) for two deciduous forest stands could explain more than 80% of the variance of flux tower measurements at both near hourly and daily timescales. We demonstrate that ambient CO2 concentrations influence daytime vegetation photosynthesis, which needs to be considered in biogeochemical models. The proposed model is complementary to classic radiative transfer theory and shows promise in modeling the radiative transfer process and photosynthetic activities over discontinuous forest canopies.

Highlights

  • Terrestrial plants assimilate atmospheric carbon dioxide through photosynthesis (Keenan et al, 2013; Myneni et al, 1997)

  • Biophysical models such as production efficiency models assume linear relationships between absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (APAR) and vegetation primary production

  • At high leaf area index (LAI), the total gap derived from Geometric Optical Radiative Transfer (GORT) is considerably greater than that modeled using Beer’s law due to strong clumping effects

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Summary

Introduction

Terrestrial plants assimilate atmospheric carbon dioxide through photosynthesis (Keenan et al, 2013; Myneni et al, 1997). Vegetation photosynthesis activity is regulated by environmental factors, and the light environment within plant canopies is one of the key drivers (Law et al, 2002; Pearcy and Sims, 1994). Biophysical models such as production efficiency models assume linear relationships between absorbed photosynthetically active radiation (APAR) and vegetation primary production

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