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Microclimate and fluxes of water vapour, sensible heat and carbon dioxide in structurally differing subalpine plant communities in the Central Caucasus
Author(s) -
Tappeiner U.,
Cernusca A.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
plant, cell and environment
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.646
H-Index - 200
eISSN - 1365-3040
pISSN - 0140-7791
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3040.1996.tb00332.x
Subject(s) - canopy , microclimate , leaf area index , shrub , environmental science , atmospheric sciences , shading , growing season , agronomy , botany , ecology , biology , geology , art , visual arts
Effects of canopy structure on microclimate, energy budget and CO 2 exchange were analysed in a pasture, two hay meadows, a tall herb community and a dwarf shrub community in the subalpine belt of the Central Caucasus. The results show that canopy structure exerts a marked influence on the distribution of photon flux density, temperature and canopy photosynthesis A c . Three canopy types were distinguished. Type 1 (pasture) has a small LAI (leaf area index) and more than two‐thirds of the phytomass is concentrated in the lowest few cm of the canopy, mainly as planophile leaves. This results in (1) a low degree of utilization of photosynthetic photon flux density (PPFD) by assimilatory plant components, (2) high leaf temperatures and a high soil heat flux during the phase of incoming radiation, and (3) a relatively low A c / LAI ratio. Type 2 (meadows), in spite of its erect leaves, which at high solar elevations permit light to penetrate to the lower canopy layers, is characterized by (1) marked effects of mutual shading in the lower canopy layers for most of the day, and thus (2) only slight variations in air and leaf temperatures and (3) a comparatively low A c /LAI ratio. In canopies of type 3 (tall herb and dwarf shrub communities), there is a concentration of flat leaves in the upper layers. This results in (1) very good utilization of PPFD; (2) no strong fluctuations in canopy temperature as the flat leaves act as a buffer, reducing the amounts of incoming and outgoing radiation in lower canopy layers, and (3) high values of the A c /LAI ratio. The energy budgets of the canopies investigated are governed not so much by their spatial structure, but rather indirectly by LAI and the degree of coupling of the canopy with the atmosphere.

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