Modelling sun-induced fluorescence and photosynthesis with a land surface model at local and regional scales in northern Europe

Thum, Tea; Zaehle, S; Koehler, P; Aalto, T; Aurela, M; Guanter, L; Kolari, P; Laurila, T; Lohila, A; Magnani, F; Van Der Tol, C; Markkanen, T

HERO ID

4248149

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2017

HERO ID 4248149
In Press No
Year 2017
Title Modelling sun-induced fluorescence and photosynthesis with a land surface model at local and regional scales in northern Europe
Authors Thum, Tea; Zaehle, S; Koehler, P; Aalto, T; Aurela, M; Guanter, L; Kolari, P; Laurila, T; Lohila, A; Magnani, F; Van Der Tol, C; Markkanen, T
Journal Biogeosciences
Volume 14
Issue 7
Page Numbers 1969-1987
Abstract Recent satellite observations of sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence (SIF) are thought to provide a large-scale proxy for gross primary production (GPP), thus providing a new way to assess the performance of land surface models (LSMs). In this study, we assessed how well SIF is able to predict GPP in the Fenno-Scandinavian region and what potential limitations for its application exist. We implemented a SIF model into the JSBACH LSM and used active leaf-level chlorophyll fluorescence measurements (Chl F) to evaluate the performance of the SIF module at a coniferous forest at Hyytiala, Finland. We also compared simulated GPP and SIF at four Finnish micrometeorological flux measurement sites to observed GPP as well as to satellite-observed SIF. Finally, we conducted a regional model simulation for the Fenno-Scandinavian region with JSBACH and compared the results to SIF retrievals from the GOME-2 (Global Ozone Monitoring Experiment-2) space-borne spectrometer and to observation-based regional GPP estimates. Both observations and simulations revealed that SIF can be used to estimate GPP at both site and regional scales. At regional scale the model was able to simulate observed SIF averaged over 5 years with r(2) of 0.86. The GOME-2-based SIF was a better proxy for GPP than the remotely sensed fA-PAR (fraction of absorbed photosynthetic active radiation by vegetation). The observed SIF captured the seasonality of the photosynthesis at site scale and showed feasibility for use in improving of model seasonality at site and regional scale.
Doi 10.5194/bg-14-1969-2017
Wosid WOS:000399304900001
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes