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The role of plant phenology in stomatal ozone flux modeling
Author(s) -
Anav Alessandro,
Liu Qiang,
De Marco Alessandra,
Proietti Chiara,
Savi Flavia,
Paoletti Elena,
Piao Shilong
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
global change biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.146
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1365-2486
pISSN - 1354-1013
DOI - 10.1111/gcb.13823
Subject(s) - phenology , environmental science , growing season , atmospheric sciences , ozone , biosphere , climatology , latitude , climate change , biosphere model , atmosphere (unit) , dormancy , ecology , geography , meteorology , biology , agronomy , geodesy , geology , germination
Abstract Plant phenology plays a pivotal role in the climate system as it regulates the gas exchange between the biosphere and the atmosphere. The uptake of ozone by forest is estimated through several meteorological variables and a specific function describing the beginning and the termination of plant growing season; actually, in many risk assessment studies, this function is based on a simple latitude and topography model. In this study, using two satellite datasets, we apply and compare six methods to estimate the start and the end dates of the growing season across a large region covering all Europe for the year 2011. Results show a large variability between the green‐up and dormancy dates estimated using the six different methods, with differences greater than one month. However, interestingly, all the methods display a common spatial pattern in the uptake of ozone by forests with a marked change in the magnitude, up to 1.9 TgO 3 /year, and corresponding to a difference of 25% in the amount of ozone that enters the leaves. Our results indicate that improved estimates of ozone fluxes require a better representation of plant phenology in the models used for O 3 risk assessment.

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