Confronting model predictions of carbon fluxes with measurements of Amazon forests subjected to experimental drought.

12 de julho de 2013

jul 12, 2013

Thomas L. Powell, David R. Galbraith, Bradley O. Christoffersen, Anna Harper, Hewlley M. A. Imbuzeiro, Lucy Rowland, Samuel Almeida, Paulo Brando, Antonio Carlos Lola da Costa, Marcos Heil Costa, Naomi M. Levine, Yadvinder Malhi, Scott R. Saleska, Eleneide Sotta, Mathew Williams, Patrick Meir, Paul R. Moorcroft

Considerable uncertainty surrounds the fate of Amazon rainforests in response to climate change. Here, carbon (C) flux predictions of five terrestrial biosphere models (Community Land Model version 3.5 (CLM3.5), Ecosystem Demography model version 2.1 (ED2), Integrated BIosphere Simulator version 2.6.4 (IBIS), Joint UK Land Environment Simulator version 2.1 (JULES) and Simple Biosphere model version 3 (SiB3)) and a hydrodynamic terrestrial ecosystem model (the Soil-Plant-Atmosphere (SPA) model) were evaluated against measurements from two large-scale Amazon drought experiments.

Model predictions agreed with the observed C fluxes in the control plots of both experiments, but poorly replicated the responses to the drought treatments. Most notably, with the exception of ED2, the models predicted negligible reductions in aboveground biomass in response to the drought treatments, which was in contrast to an observed c. 20% reduction at both sites. For ED2, the timing of the decline in aboveground biomass was accurate, but the magnitude was too high for one site and too low for the other.

Three key findings indicate critical areas for future research and model development. First, the models predicted declines in autotrophic respiration under prolonged drought in contrast to measured increases at one of the sites. Secondly, models lacking a phenological response to drought introduced bias in the sensitivity of canopy productivity and respiration to drought. Thirdly, the phenomenological water-stress functions used by the terrestrial biosphere models to represent the effects of soil moisture on stomatal conductance yielded unrealistic diurnal and seasonal responses to drought.

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Caminhos para uma Agricultura Familiar sob Bases Ecológicas: Produzindo com Baixa Emissão de Carbono

Caminhos para uma Agricultura Familiar sob Bases Ecológicas: Produzindo com Baixa Emissão de Carbono

Com o intuito de promover um diálogo qualificado sobre os caminhos da produção familiar rumo a uma produção de baixa emissão de carbono, o Instituto de Pesquisa Ambiental da Amazônia (IPAM), em parceria institucional com a Secretaria de Agricultura Familiar (SAF), o Núcleo de Estudos Agrários e Desenvolvimento Rural (NEAD), o Instituto Nacional de Colonização e Reforma Agrária (Incra - Ministério do Desenvolvimento Agrário), a Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária (Embrapa) e o Ministério do Meio Ambiente (MMA), realizou um seminário, no dia 13 de junho de 2013, intitulado “Caminhos para uma Agricultura Familiar sob Bases Ecológicas: produzindo com Baixa Emissão de Carbono”. O livro traz os artigos escritos pelos especialistas que participaram do evento e foram elaborados com uma visão para a diversidade que permeia todos os biomas, divididos em eixos lógicos que procuraram responder aos desafios da agricultura familiar.