Understanding Disturbance Regimes From Patterns in Modeled Forest Biomass

Author:

Wang Siyuan12ORCID,Yang Hui1,Koirala Sujan1ORCID,Forkel Matthias2ORCID,Reichstein Markus13ORCID,Carvalhais Nuno134ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Max‐Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry Jena Germany

2. Technische Universität Dresden Institute of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing Dresden Germany

3. ELLIS Unit Jena at Michael‐Stifel‐Center Jena for Data‐driven and Simulation Science Jena Germany

4. Departamento de Ciências e Engenharia do Ambiente Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia Universidade Nova de Lisboa Caparica Portugal

Abstract

AbstractNatural and anthropogenic disturbances are important drivers of tree mortality, shaping the structure, composition, and biomass distribution of forest ecosystems. Differences in disturbance regimes, characterized by the frequency, extent, and intensity of disturbance events, result in structurally different landscapes. In this study, we design a model‐based experiment to investigate the links between disturbance regimes and spatial biomass patterns. First, the effects of disturbance events on biomass patterns are simulated using a simple dynamic carbon cycle model based on different disturbance regime attributes, which are characterized via three parameters: μ (probability scale), α (clustering degree), and β (intensity slope). 856,800 dynamically stable biomass patterns were then simulated using combined disturbance regime, primary productivity, and background mortality. As independent variables, we use biomass synthesis statistics from simulated biomass patterns to retrieve three disturbance regime parameters. Results show confident inversion of all three “true” disturbance parameters, with Nash‐Sutcliffe efficiency of 94.8% for μ, 94.9% for α, and 97.1% for β. Biomass histogram statistics primarily dominate the prediction of μ and β, while texture features have a more substantial influence on α. Overall, these results demonstrate the association between biomass patterns and disturbance regimes. Given the increasing availability of Earth observation of biomass, our findings open a new avenue to understand better and parameterize disturbance regimes and their links with vegetation dynamics under climate change. Ultimately, at a large scale, this approach would improve our current understanding of controls and feedback at the biosphere‐atmosphere interface in the present Earth system models.

Funder

Bundesministerium für Wirtschaft und Technologie

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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