COS 114-7 - Ozone-induced decreases in photosynthesis and transpiration: Modifying Farquhar and Ball-Berry models

Friday, August 6, 2010: 10:10 AM
336, David L Lawrence Convention Center
Danica L. Lombardozzi1, Gordon Bonan2, Samuel Levis3 and Jed P. Sparks1, (1)Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, (2)NCAR, Boulder, CO, (3)National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO
Background/Question/Methods

Emissions from human industrial processes are indirectly increasing concentrations of surface ozone (O3), a pollutant known to have negative impacts on plants, including reductions in crop yields, plant growth, and visible leaf injury.  Ozone directly influences photosynthesis via two mechanisms: 1) the oxidation of cellular components (i.e., influencing leaf internal biochemistry and transport) and 2) altering stomatal functioning, ultimately changing conductance and transpiration.  Carbon exchange at the leaf level is governed by both conductance and carboxylation processes, but water exchange depends primarily on the size of the stomatal aperture.  Previous experimental work supports that ozone exposure differentially affects plant-mediated carbon and water fluxes.  After 12 weeks of O3 exposure, the normally tight relationship between photosynthesis and transpiration weakened significantly, suggesting a decoupling of photosynthesis and stomatal conductance.  However, these differential effects of O3 are not explicitly expressed in most modeling efforts.  We simulated O3 damage to plant physiology using Farquhar and Ball-Berry based photosynthesis and stomatal conductance models to determine the parameterization that best simulated experimental response data.  We then incorporated the optimal parameterizations into the Community Land Model at the National Center for Atmospheric Research to determine global responses to a fixed O3 value.  
Results/Conclusions

Most models that incorporate O3 damage to plant physiology decrease photosynthesis after model calculations (post-hoc modifications).  Our results demonstrate that the Farquhar photosynthesis code, used in most regional and global models, best simulates O3 damage to photosynthesis when Vcmax, which estimates the efficiency of carboxylating enzymes, is modified during calculations rather than post-hoc modifications.  Because the Farquhar photosynthesis values are directly used to model Ball-Berry stomatal conductance, O3-induced decreases to photosynthesis also decrease stomatal conductance.  However, both Vcmax and post-hoc modifications to photosynthesis simulate stomatal conductance values that are much lower than observed conductance values.  Conductance responses to O3 are best simulated when photosynthesis is unchanged and the Ball-Berry code incorporates a direct modification to stomatal conductance based on experimental data.  These results suggest that regional and global models currently incorporating O3 damage to plants potentially generate significant error in estimates of transpiration through over-predicting decreases in stomatal conductance.  Therefore, O3-induced changes in plant release of water, arguably the most important greenhouse gas, are currently poorly described.

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