Identifying important topics for model refinement in a widely used process-based model informed by correlative model analyses in a boreal forest
Schibalski, Anett; Lehtonen, Aleksi; Hickler, Thomas; Schröder, Boris (2017)
URI
http://www.silvafennica.fihttps://www.silvafennica.fi/pdf/article6977.pdf
https://doi.org/10.14214/sf.6977
Schibalski, Anett
Lehtonen, Aleksi
Hickler, Thomas
Schröder, Boris
Julkaisusarja
Silva Fennica
Volyymi
51
Numero
4
Sivut
article id 6977
The Finnish Society of Forest Science
2017
Tiivistelmä
Models attempting to predict treeline shifts in changing climates must include the relevant ecological processes in sufficient detail. A previous correlative model study has pointed to nutrients, competition, and temperature as the most important factors shaping the treelines of Pinus sylvestris L., Picea abies (L.) H. Karst. and Betula pubescens Ehrh. in Finnish Lapland. Here, we applied a widely used process-based dynamic vegetation model (LPJ-GUESS) to (i) test its capability to simulate observed spatial and temporal patterns of the main tree species in Finnish Lapland, and (ii) to explore the model representation of important processes in order to guide further model development. A European parameterization of LPJ-GUESS overestimated especially P. abies biomass and the species’ northern range limit. We identified implemented processes to adjust (competition, disturbance) and crucial processes in boreal forests to include (nutrient limitation, forest management) which account for the model’s failure to (edaphically) restrict P. abies in Finnish Lapland and the resulting species imbalance. Key competitive mechanisms are shade and drought tolerance, nutrient limitation, fire resistance, and susceptibility to disturbances (storm, herbivory) which we discussed with respect to boreal ecology and promising model developments to provide a starting point for future model development.
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