Oil palm modelling in the global land surface model ORCHIDEE-MICT
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Published:2021-07-23
Issue:7
Volume:14
Page:4573-4592
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ISSN:1991-9603
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Container-title:Geoscientific Model Development
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geosci. Model Dev.
Author:
Xu Yidi, Ciais Philippe, Yu LeORCID, Li WeiORCID, Chen Xiuzhi, Zhang Haicheng, Yue ChaoORCID, Kanniah Kasturi, Cracknell Arthur P., Gong PengORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Oil palm is the most productive oil crop that provides
∼ 40 % of the global vegetable oil supply, with 7 % of the
cultivated land devoted to oil plants. The rapid expansion of oil palm
cultivation is seen as one of the major causes for deforestation emissions
and threatens the conservation of rain forest and swamp areas and their
associated ecosystem services in tropical areas. Given the importance of oil
palm in oil production and its adverse environmental consequences, it is
important to understand the physiological and phenological processes of oil
palm and its impacts on the carbon, water and energy cycles. In most global
vegetation models, oil palm is represented by generic plant functional types
(PFTs) without specific representation of its morphological, physical and
physiological traits. This would cause biases in the subsequent simulations.
In this study, we introduced a new specific PFT for oil palm in the global
land surface model ORCHIDEE-MICT (v8.4.2, Organising Carbon and Hydrology in Dynamic Ecosystems–aMeliorated
Interactions between Carbon and Temperature). The specific morphology,
phenology and harvest process of oil palm were implemented, and the plant
carbon allocation scheme was modified to support the growth of the branch and
fruit component of each phytomer. A new age-specific parameterization scheme
for photosynthesis, autotrophic respiration and carbon allocation was also
developed for the oil palm PFT, based on observed physiology, and was
calibrated by observations. The improved model generally reproduces the leaf
area index, biomass density and fruit yield during the life cycle at 14
observation sites. Photosynthesis, carbon allocation and biomass components
for oil palm also agree well with observations. This explicit representation
of oil palm in a global land surface model offers a useful tool for
understanding the ecological processes of oil palm growth and assessing the
environmental impacts of oil palm plantations.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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