Abstract
Abstract. Bioenergy crop cultivation for lignocellulosic biomass is increasingly
important for future climate mitigation, and it is assumed on large scales in
integrated assessment models (IAMs) that develop future land use change
scenarios consistent with the dual constraint of sufficient food production
and deep decarbonization for low climate-warming targets. In most global
vegetation models, there is no specific representation of crops producing
lignocellulosic biomass, resulting in simulation biases of biomass yields and
other carbon outputs, and in turn of future bioenergy production. Here, we
introduced four new plant functional types (PFTs) to represent four major
lignocellulosic bioenergy crops, eucalypt, poplar and willow,
Miscanthus, and switchgrass, in the global process-based vegetation
model ORCHIDEE. New parameterizations of photosynthesis, carbon allocation,
and phenology are proposed based on a compilation of field measurements. A
specific harvest module is further added to the model to simulate the
rotation of bioenergy tree PFTs based on their age dynamics. The resulting
ORCHIDEE-MICT-BIOENERGY model is applied at 296 locations where field
measurements of harvested biomass are available for different bioenergy
crops. The new model can generally reproduce the global bioenergy crop yield
observations. Biases in the model results related to grid-based simulations
versus the point-scale measurements and the lack of fertilization and
fertilization management practices in the model are discussed. This study
sheds light on the importance of properly representing bioenergy crops for
simulating their yields. The parameterizations of bioenergy crops presented
here are generic enough to be applicable in other global vegetation models.
Funder
European Commission
European Research Council
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