Publication Date:
2017
abstract:
Carbon exchange over croplands plays an important role in the European carbon cycle over daily to seasonal
time scales. Not only do crops occupy one eighth of the global land area, but their photosynthesis
and respiration are large and aect CO2 mole fractions at nearly every atmospheric CO2 monitoring
site. A better description of this crop carbon exchange in terrestrial biosphere models { most of which
currently treat crops as unmanaged grasslands { could strongly improve their calculated
uxes. Available
longterm observations of crop yield, harvest, and cultivated area allow such improvements, when
combined with the new crop-specic modeling framework we present here. In this framework we model
gross carbon
uxes of the major European crops on a 25 x 25 km grid and daily time-step, while aiming to
make calculated seasonal grain yield agree with observations. For each crop species and region of Europe,
this follows a two-step procedure. In the rst step, we calculate crop growth over the full growing season
with the process-based WOrld FOod STudies (WOFOST) agricultural crop growth model, which results
in a simulated crop yield. Simulated yields are optimized by minimizing their dierence to regional crop
yield observations from the Statistical Oce of the European Union (EUROSTAT) by estimating one
yearly regional scaling parameter for each crop species, the so-called \yield gap factor". In a second step,
we run our WOFOST model for the full European 25km2 gridded domain using the optimized yield-gap
factors for each crop species and region, to make wall-to-wall carbon exchange
uxes that also take into
account the local variations of weather, soil properties, and sowing calendar. We combine the resulting
GPP and Raut
uxes with a simple soil respiration expression to obtain the gridded total ecosystem
respiration (TER) and net ecosystem exchange (NEE). We assess our model's ability to represent the
seasonal GPP, TER and NEE
uxes using 40 site-years of observations at 7 European FluxNet cropland
sites and compare it with cropland carbon
uxes produced by a typical terrestrial biosphere model used
widely for European carbon cycle studies. We conclude that our new model framework provides a more
detailed, realistic, and strongly observation-driven estimate of carbon exchange over European croplands.
Its products will be made available to the scientic community through the ICOS Carbon Portal, and
serve as a new cropland component in the CarbonTracker Europe inverse model
ux estimates.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
carbon cycle; CO2; cropland; net ecosystem exchange
List of contributors:
Magliulo, Vincenzo
Published in: