Climate change effects on carbon and water fluxes in mountain ecosystems
File(s)
Author(s)
Sandoval Calle, David
Type
Thesis or dissertation
Abstract
The spatial trade-off between elevation and latitude compresses many life zones into a few kilometres
of elevation, and creates steep environmental gradients. This feature was used in this project to
develop and test some ideas on ecosystem function, combining observations and robust models based
on first principles. To reproduce some of the observed patterns of water and energy fluxes, the
Simple Process-Led Algorithms for Simulating Habitats (SPLASH) model was extended, making use
of first-principles concepts in order to reduce the need for free parameters to a minimum. Whenever
empirical formulations were used (e.g. pedotransfer functions, albedo-snow cover functions), they
were optimized/fitted using a combination of remote sensing data and globally distributed observational
datasets. Simulations of soil water content, evapotranspiration and snow-water equivalent were
compared against in-situ measurements using multiple data sources. The statistical performance
of the extended model was tested with pooled measurements from multiple stations. The results were
also compared to simulations from the Variable Infiltration Capacity (VIC-3L) model. To explore
how different photosynthetic responses – well documented at leaf level – converge towards emergent
spatial patterns at ecosystem scale, I considered how elevation shapes light use efficiency (LUE,
the ratio of CO2 assimilated over light absorbed) and water use efficiency (WUE, the ratio of CO2
assimilated over water used in transpiration) in mountain regions worldwide. I used data from eddycovariance
flux towers, from different networks, located in mountain regions around the world, adding
up to 618 station-years of record. To complement my analysis, I included theoretical predictions
using an optimality model (P-model) and evaluated changes in the spatial pattern with simulation
experiments. Empirically I found a small but globally consistent effect of elevation on LUE andWUE.
I propose a theoretical explanation for the observation that temperature differences have little impact
on the biogeographical pattern of LUE and WUE, but I also find that different assumptions on the
acclimation of the maximum rate of electron transport (Jmax ) and the intrinsic quantum yield of
photosynthesis ('0) change this pattern. Finally to evaluate how environmental changes, particularly
temperature enhancement at high elevations and CO2 increase, will alter carbon and water fluxes of
mountain ecosystems, some hypotheses were formulated and tested with simulation experiments at
high spatial resolution, using a climate projection to 2050 under the RCP4.5 climate-change scenario.
of elevation, and creates steep environmental gradients. This feature was used in this project to
develop and test some ideas on ecosystem function, combining observations and robust models based
on first principles. To reproduce some of the observed patterns of water and energy fluxes, the
Simple Process-Led Algorithms for Simulating Habitats (SPLASH) model was extended, making use
of first-principles concepts in order to reduce the need for free parameters to a minimum. Whenever
empirical formulations were used (e.g. pedotransfer functions, albedo-snow cover functions), they
were optimized/fitted using a combination of remote sensing data and globally distributed observational
datasets. Simulations of soil water content, evapotranspiration and snow-water equivalent were
compared against in-situ measurements using multiple data sources. The statistical performance
of the extended model was tested with pooled measurements from multiple stations. The results were
also compared to simulations from the Variable Infiltration Capacity (VIC-3L) model. To explore
how different photosynthetic responses – well documented at leaf level – converge towards emergent
spatial patterns at ecosystem scale, I considered how elevation shapes light use efficiency (LUE,
the ratio of CO2 assimilated over light absorbed) and water use efficiency (WUE, the ratio of CO2
assimilated over water used in transpiration) in mountain regions worldwide. I used data from eddycovariance
flux towers, from different networks, located in mountain regions around the world, adding
up to 618 station-years of record. To complement my analysis, I included theoretical predictions
using an optimality model (P-model) and evaluated changes in the spatial pattern with simulation
experiments. Empirically I found a small but globally consistent effect of elevation on LUE andWUE.
I propose a theoretical explanation for the observation that temperature differences have little impact
on the biogeographical pattern of LUE and WUE, but I also find that different assumptions on the
acclimation of the maximum rate of electron transport (Jmax ) and the intrinsic quantum yield of
photosynthesis ('0) change this pattern. Finally to evaluate how environmental changes, particularly
temperature enhancement at high elevations and CO2 increase, will alter carbon and water fluxes of
mountain ecosystems, some hypotheses were formulated and tested with simulation experiments at
high spatial resolution, using a climate projection to 2050 under the RCP4.5 climate-change scenario.
Version
Open Access
Date Issued
2021-09
Date Awarded
2022-06
Copyright Statement
Creative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike Licence
Advisor
Prentice, Iain Colin
Sponsor
National Secretariat for Higher Education, Science, Technology and Innovation of Ecuador (SENESCYT)
Publisher Department
Life Sciences
Publisher Institution
Imperial College London
Qualification Level
Doctoral
Qualification Name
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)