Carbon-phosphorus cycle models overestimate CO 2 enrichment response in a mature Eucalyptus forest

The importance of phosphorus (P) in regulating ecosystem responses to climate change has fostered P-cycle implementation in land surface models, but their CO effects predictions have not been evaluated against measurements. Here, we perform a data-driven model evaluation where simulations of eight w...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science advances 2024-07, Vol.10 (27), p.eadl5822
Hauptverfasser: Jiang, Mingkai, Medlyn, Belinda E, Wårlind, David, Knauer, Jürgen, Fleischer, Katrin, Goll, Daniel S, Olin, Stefan, Yang, Xiaojuan, Yu, Lin, Zaehle, Sönke, Zhang, Haicheng, Lv, He, Crous, Kristine Y, Carrillo, Yolima, Macdonald, Catriona, Anderson, Ian, Boer, Matthias M, Farrell, Mark, Gherlenda, Andrew, Castañeda-Gómez, Laura, Hasegawa, Shun, Jarosch, Klaus, Milham, Paul, Ochoa-Hueso, Raúl, Pathare, Varsha, Pihlblad, Johanna, Nevado, Juan Piñeiro, Powell, Jeff, Power, Sally A, Reich, Peter, Riegler, Markus, Ellsworth, David S, Smith, Benjamin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The importance of phosphorus (P) in regulating ecosystem responses to climate change has fostered P-cycle implementation in land surface models, but their CO effects predictions have not been evaluated against measurements. Here, we perform a data-driven model evaluation where simulations of eight widely used P-enabled models were confronted with observations from a long-term free-air CO enrichment experiment in a mature, P-limited forest. We show that most models predicted the correct sign and magnitude of the CO effect on ecosystem carbon (C) sequestration, but they generally overestimated the effects on plant C uptake and growth. We identify leaf-to-canopy scaling of photosynthesis, plant tissue stoichiometry, plant belowground C allocation, and the subsequent consequences for plant-microbial interaction as key areas in which models of ecosystem C-P interaction can be improved. Together, this data-model intercomparison reveals data-driven insights into the performance and functionality of P-enabled models and adds to the existing evidence that the global CO -driven carbon sink is overestimated by models.
ISSN:2375-2548
2375-2548
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.adl5822