Abstract

Changes in clouds and aerosols may alter the quantity of solar radiance and its diffuse components, as well as air temperature (Ta) and vapor pressure deficit (VPD), thereby affecting canopy photosynthesis. Our aim was to determine how ecosystem gross primary productivity (GPP) responds to the cloudiness and aerosol depth changes, as indicated by diffuse light fraction (fDIF). The environmental factors that caused these responses were examined using 2 years of eddy covariance data from a winter-wheat cropland in northern China. The GPP decreased significantly along with the fDIF in a nonlinear pattern, with a determination coefficient of 0.91. Changes in fDIF altered total photosynthetic active radiation (PAR), diffuse PAR, Ta and VPD. The variations in GPP with fDIF in both fDIF change Phase I (fDIF < 0.65) and Phase II (fDIF > 0.65) resulted from the combined effects of multiple environmental factors. Because the driving factors were closely correlated, a path analysis was used to distinguish their respective contribution to the GPP response to fDIF by integrating path coefficients. In Phases I and II, the decreased responses of GPP to fDIF were mainly caused by total PAR and diffuse PAR, respectively, which contributed approximately 49% and 37% to GPP variations, respectively. Our research has certain implications for the necessity to consider fDIF and to incorporate diffuse light into photosynthetic models.

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