Integration of a Frost Mortality Scheme Into the Demographic Vegetation Model FATES

Author:

Lambert Marius S. A.1ORCID,Tang Hui23ORCID,Aas Kjetil S.2ORCID,Stordal Frode2,Fisher Rosie A.4,Bjerke Jarle W.5,Holm Jennifer A.6ORCID,Parmentier Frans‐Jan W.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Biogeochemistry in the Anthropocene Department of Geosciences University of Oslo Oslo Norway

2. Department of Geosciences University of Oslo Oslo Norway

3. Geo‐Ecology Research Group Natural History Museum University of Oslo Oslo Norway

4. CICERO ‐ Center for International Climate Research Oslo Norway

5. High North Research Centre for Climate and the Environment Norwegian Institute for Nature Research Tromsø Norway

6. Climate and Ecosystem Sciences Division Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Berkeley CA USA

7. Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science Lund University Lund Sweden

Abstract

AbstractFrost is damaging to plants when air temperature drops below their tolerance threshold. The set of mechanisms used by cold‐tolerant plants to withstand freezing is called “hardening” and typically take place in autumn to protect against winter damage. The recent incorporation of a hardening scheme in the demographic vegetation model FATES opens up the possibility to investigate frost mortality to vegetation. Previously, the hardening scheme was used to improve hydraulic processes in cold‐tolerant plants. In this study, we expand upon the existing hardening scheme by implementing hardiness‐dependent frost mortality into CLM5.0‐FATES to study the impacts of frost on vegetation in temperate and boreal sites from 1950 to 2015. Our results show that the original freezing mortality approach of FATES, where each plant type had a fixed freezing tolerance threshold—an approach common to many other dynamic vegetation models, was restricted to predicting plant type distribution. The main results emerging from the new scheme are a high autumn and spring frost mortality, especially at colder sites, and increasing mid‐winter frost mortality due to global warming, especially at warmer sites. We demonstrate that the new frost scheme is a major step forward in dynamically representing vegetation in ESMs by for the first time including a level of frost tolerance that is responding to the environment and includes some level of cost (implicitly) and benefit. By linking hardening and frost mortality in a land surface model, we open new ways to explore the impact of frost events in the context of global warming.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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