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Water-use efficiency as a means of modelling net assimilation in boreal forests

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Abstract.

Although the processes governing photosynthesis are well understood, scaling from shoot to canopy in coniferous forests is complex. Development of different sap-flow techniques has made it possible to measure transpiration of whole trees and thereby also of whole canopies. There is a strong link between photosynthesis and transpiration, for which reason it would be interesting to test whether measurements of canopy transpiration could also be used to estimate canopy photosynthesis. As a first step towards this, water-use efficiency (WUE) was studied at branch and canopy scales on the basis of branch gas-exchange measurements, with half-hourly and daily temporal resolution. Half-hourly and daily WUE at both branch and canopy scales showed a strong dependency on vapour-pressure deficit (δe). Branch photosynthesis modelled from branch transpiration and δe mimicked well measured branch photosynthesis. Also, modelled photosynthesis, scaled to canopy and compared to net forest CO2 exchange measured by the eddy-covariance technique, occasionally showed good agreement. In spite of these seemingly promising results, there was a difference in the response to δe between branches and between years, which needs to be better understood.

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Morén, AS., Lindroth, A. & Grelle, A. Water-use efficiency as a means of modelling net assimilation in boreal forests. Trees 15, 67–74 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/s004680000078

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s004680000078

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