Assessing impacts of selective logging on water, energy, and carbon budgets and ecosystem dynamics in Amazon forests using the Functionally Assembled Terrestrial Ecosystem Simulator
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Published:2020-10-19
Issue:20
Volume:17
Page:4999-5023
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Huang MaoyiORCID, Xu Yi, Longo MarcosORCID, Keller MichaelORCID, Knox Ryan G., Koven Charles D.ORCID, Fisher Rosie A.
Abstract
Abstract. Tropical forest degradation from logging, fire, and fragmentation not only
alters carbon stocks and carbon fluxes, but also impacts physical
land surface properties such as albedo and roughness length. Such impacts
are poorly quantified to date due to difficulties in accessing and
maintaining observational infrastructures, as well as the lack of proper modeling
tools for capturing the interactions among biophysical properties, ecosystem
demography, canopy structure, and biogeochemical cycling in tropical
forests. As a first step to address these limitations, we implemented a
selective logging module into the Functionally Assembled Terrestrial
Ecosystem Simulator (FATES) by mimicking the ecological, biophysical, and
biogeochemical processes following a logging event. The model can specify
the timing and aerial extent of logging events, splitting the logged forest
patch into disturbed and intact patches; determine the survivorship of
cohorts in the disturbed patch; and modifying the biomass and necromass
(total mass of coarse woody debris and litter) pools following logging. We
parameterized the logging module to reproduce a selective logging experiment
at the Tapajós National Forest in Brazil and benchmarked model outputs
against available field measurements. Our results suggest that the model
permits the coexistence of early and late successional functional types and
realistically characterizes the seasonality of water and carbon fluxes and
stocks, the forest structure and composition, and the ecosystem succession
following disturbance. However, the current version of FATES overestimates
water stress in the dry season and therefore fails to capture seasonal variation
in latent and sensible heat fluxes. Moreover, we observed a bias towards low
stem density and leaf area when compared to observations, suggesting that
improvements are needed in both carbon allocation and establishment of
trees. The effects of logging were assessed by different logging scenarios
to represent reduced impact and conventional logging practices, both with
high and low logging intensities. The model simulations suggest that in
comparison to old-growth forests the logged forests rapidly recover water
and energy fluxes in 1 to 3 years. In contrast, the recovery times for
carbon stocks, forest structure, and composition are more than 30 years
depending on logging practices and intensity. This study lays the foundation
to simulate land use change and forest degradation in FATES, which will be
an effective tool to directly represent forest management practices and
regeneration in the context of Earth system models.
Funder
Office of Science National Aeronautics and Space Administration
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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