Heat-Mitigation Effects of Irrigated Rice-Paddy Fields Under Changing Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide Based on a Coupled Atmosphere and Crop Energy-Balance Model

Known as the heat-mitigation effect, irrigated rice-paddy fields distribute a large fraction of their received energy to the latent heat during the growing season. The present hypothesis is that increased atmospheric CO 2 concentration decreases the stomatal conductance of rice plants and increases...

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Veröffentlicht in:Boundary-layer meteorology 2021-06, Vol.179 (3), p.447-476
Hauptverfasser: Ikawa, Hiroki, Kuwagata, Tsuneo, Haginoya, Shigenori, Ishigooka, Yasushi, Ono, Keisuke, Maruyama, Atsushi, Sakai, Hidemitsu, Fukuoka, Minehiko, Yoshimoto, Mayumi, Ishida, Sachinobu, Chen, Charles P., Hasegawa, Toshihiro, Watanabe, Tsutomu
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Known as the heat-mitigation effect, irrigated rice-paddy fields distribute a large fraction of their received energy to the latent heat during the growing season. The present hypothesis is that increased atmospheric CO 2 concentration decreases the stomatal conductance of rice plants and increases the air temperature by means of an increased sensible heat flux. To test this hypothesis, a coupled regional atmospheric and crop energy-balance model is developed and applied to a 300 × 300 km 2 region in Japan. Downscaling meteorological variables from grid-mean values of mixed land use (3 × 3 km 2 ) generates realistic typical diurnal cycles of air temperature in rice paddies and adjacent residential areas. The model simulation shows that, on a typical sunny day in summer, doubling the CO 2 concentration increases the daily maximum grid-mean air temperature, particularly where rice paddies are present, by up to 0.7 °C. This CO 2 effect on the grid-mean air temperature is approximately half the effect of the reduction in rice-paddy area that is postulated to occur on a time scale similar to that of the atmospheric CO 2 change. However, within the internal atmospheric boundary layer of the rice paddies, the CO 2 effect on the air temperature (+ 0.44 °C) still exceeds the effects of the land-use change (+ 0.11 °C). These results show a potentially important interplay of plant physiological responses regarding atmospheric CO 2 in the heat-mitigation effect of rice-paddy fields under a changing climate.
ISSN:0006-8314
1573-1472
DOI:10.1007/s10546-021-00604-6