Abstract
Abstract. Competition is a major driver of carbon allocation to different
plant tissues (e.g., wood, leaves, fine roots), and allocation, in turn,
shapes vegetation structure. To improve their modeling of the terrestrial
carbon cycle, many Earth system models now incorporate vegetation
demographic models (VDMs) that explicitly simulate the processes of
individual-based competition for light and soil resources. Here, in order to
understand how these competition processes affect predictions of the
terrestrial carbon cycle, we simulate forest responses to elevated
atmospheric CO2 concentration [CO2] along a nitrogen availability
gradient, using a VDM that allows us to compare fixed allocation strategies
vs. competitively optimal allocation strategies. Our results show that
competitive and fixed strategies predict opposite fractional allocation to
fine roots and wood, though they predict similar changes in total net primary production (NPP) along
the nitrogen gradient. The competitively optimal allocation strategy
predicts decreasing fine root and increasing wood allocation with increasing
nitrogen, whereas the fixed strategy predicts the opposite. Although
simulated plant biomass at equilibrium increases with nitrogen due to
increases in photosynthesis for both allocation strategies, the increase in
biomass with nitrogen is much steeper for competitively optimal allocation
due to its increased allocation to wood. The qualitatively opposite
fractional allocation to fine roots and wood of the two strategies also
impacts the effects of elevated [CO2] on plant biomass. Whereas the
fixed allocation strategy predicts an increase in plant biomass under
elevated [CO2] that is approximately independent of nitrogen
availability, competition leads to higher plant biomass response to elevated
[CO2] with increasing nitrogen availability. Our results indicate that
the VDMs that explicitly include the effects of competition for light and
soil resources on allocation may generate significantly different
ecosystem-level predictions of carbon storage than those that use fixed
strategies.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Cited by
17 articles.
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