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Eco-evolutionary optimality as a means to improve vegetation and land-surface models

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Title: Eco-evolutionary optimality as a means to improve vegetation and land-surface models
Authors: Harrison, S
Cramer, W
Franklin, O
Prentice, IC
Wang, H
Brannstrom, A
De Boer, H
Dieckmann, U
Joshi, J
Keenan, T
Lavergne, A
Manzoni, S
Mengoli, G
Morfopoulos, C
Penuelas, J
Dietsch, S
Rebel, K
Ryu, Y
Smith, N
Stocker, B
Wright, I
Item Type: Journal Article
Abstract: Global vegetation and land-surface models embody interdisciplinary scientific understanding of the behaviour of plants and ecosystems, and are indispensable to project the impacts of environmental change on vegetation and the interactions between vegetation and climate. However, systematic errors and persistently large differences among carbon and water cycle projections by different models highlight the limitations of current process formulations. In this review, focusing on core plant functions in the terrestrial carbon and water cycles, we show how unifying hypotheses derived from eco-evolutionary optimality (EEO) principles can provide novel, parameter-sparse representations of plant and vegetation processes. We present case studies that demonstrate how EEO generate parsimonious representations of core, leaf-level processes that are individually testable and supported by evidence. EEO approaches to photosynthesis and primary production, dark respiration, and stomatal behaviour are ripe for implementation in global models. EEO approaches to other important traits, including the leaf economics spectrum and applications of EEO at the community level are active research areas. Independently tested modules emerging from EEO studies could profitably be integrated into modelling frameworks that account for the multiple time scales on which plants and plant communities adjust to environmental change.
Issue Date: 1-Sep-2021
Date of Acceptance: 25-May-2021
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/90033
DOI: 10.1111/nph.17558
ISSN: 0028-646X
Publisher: Wiley
Start Page: 2125
End Page: 2141
Journal / Book Title: New Phytologist
Volume: 231
Issue: 6
Copyright Statement: This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Sponsor/Funder: Commission of the European Communities
Funder's Grant Number: 787203
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Plant Sciences
acclimation
eco-evolutionary optimality
global vegetation model
land-surface model
leaf economics spectrum
plant functional ecology
stomatal behaviour
water and carbon trade-offs
PLANT FUNCTIONAL TYPES
TROPICAL MOIST FORESTS
WATER-USE EFFICIENCY
STOMATAL CONDUCTANCE
ELEVATED CO2
ISOPRENE EMISSIONS
TRAIT VARIATION
CARBON-DIOXIDE
CLIMATE-CHANGE
QUANTUM YIELD
acclimation
eco-evolutionary optimality
global vegetation model
land-surface model
leaf economics spectrum
plant functional ecology
stomatal behaviour
water and carbon trade-offs
Climate Change
Ecosystem
Plant Leaves
Plant Physiological Phenomena
Plants
Plants
Plant Leaves
Ecosystem
Plant Physiological Phenomena
Climate Change
Plant Biology & Botany
06 Biological Sciences
07 Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences
Publication Status: Published
Online Publication Date: 2021-06-15
Appears in Collections:Space and Atmospheric Physics
Physics
Grantham Institute for Climate Change
Faculty of Natural Sciences