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DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2012.02728.x
¤ OpenAccess: Green
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Simulating forest productivity along a neotropical elevational transect: temperature variation and carbon use efficiency

Toby R. Marthews,Yadvinder Malhi,Cécile Girardin,Javier E. Silva-Espejo,Luiz E. O. C. Aragão,Daniel B. Metcalfe,Joshua M. Rapp,Lina M. Mercado,Rosie A. Fisher,David Galbraith,Joshua B. Fisher,Norma Salinas,A. D. Friend,Natalia Restrepo‐Coupe,Richard J. Williams

Transect
Environmental science
Cloud forest
2012
A better understanding of the mechanisms controlling the magnitude and sign of carbon components in tropical forest ecosystems is important for reliable estimation of this important regional component of the global carbon cycle. We used the JULES vegetation model to simulate all components of the carbon balance at six sites along an Andes-Amazon transect across Peru and Brazil and compared the results to published field measurements. In the upper montane zone the model predicted a lack of forest vegetation, indicating a need for better parameterization of the responses of cloud forest vegetation within the model. In the lower montane and lowland zones simulated ecosystem productivity and respiration were predicted with reasonable accuracy, although not always within the error bounds of the observations. Model-predicted carbon use efficiency in this transect surprisingly did not increase with elevation, but remained close to the 'temperate' value 0.5. Upper montane forests were predicted to allocate ~50% of carbon fixation to biomass maintenance and growth, despite available measurements showing that they only allocate ~33%. This may be explained by elevational changes in the balance between growth and maintenance respiration within the forest canopy, as controlled by both temperature- and pressure-mediated processes, which is not yet well represented in current vegetation models.
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    Simulating forest productivity along a neotropical elevational transect: temperature variation and carbon use efficiency” is a paper by Toby R. Marthews Yadvinder Malhi Cécile Girardin Javier E. Silva-Espejo Luiz E. O. C. Aragão Daniel B. Metcalfe Joshua M. Rapp Lina M. Mercado Rosie A. Fisher David Galbraith Joshua B. Fisher Norma Salinas A. D. Friend Natalia Restrepo‐Coupe Richard J. Williams published in 2012. It has an Open Access status of “green”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.