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首页> 外文期刊>Ecological Modelling >Importance of tree- and species-level interactions with wildfire, climate, and soils in interior Alaska: Implications for forest change under a warming climate
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Importance of tree- and species-level interactions with wildfire, climate, and soils in interior Alaska: Implications for forest change under a warming climate

机译:树木和物种级别与野火,气候和土壤相互作用的重要性,阿拉斯加地区的野火和土壤:在温暖的气候下对森林变化的影响

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摘要

The boreal zone of Alaska is dominated by interactions between disturbances, vegetation, and soils. These interactions are likely to change in the future through increasing permafrost thaw, more frequent and intense wildfires, and vegetation change from drought and competition. We utilize an individual tree-based vegetation model, the University of Virginia Forest Model Enhanced (UVAFME), to estimate current and future forest conditions across sites within interior Alaska. We updated UVAFME for application within interior Alaska, including improved simulation of permafrost dynamics, litter decay, nutrient dynamics, fire mortality, and post-fire regrowth. Following these updates, UVAFME output on species-specific biomass and stem density was comparable to inventory measurements at various forest types within interior Alaska. We then simulated forest response to climate change at specific inventory locations and across the Tanana Valley River Basin on a 2 x 2 km(2) grid. We derived projected temperature and precipitation from a five-model average taken from the CMIP5 archive under the RCP 4.5 and 8.5 scenarios. Results suggest that climate change and the concomitant impacts on wildfire and permafrost dynamics will result in overall decreases in biomass (particularly for spruce (Picea spp.)) within the interior Tanana Valley, despite increases in quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) biomass, and a resulting shift towards higher deciduous fraction. Simulation results also predict increases in biomass at cold, wet locations and at high elevations, and decreases in biomass in dry locations, under both moderate (RCP 4.5) and extreme (RCP 8.5) climate change scenarios. These simulations demonstrate that a highly detailed, species interactive model can be used across a large region within Alaska to investigate interactions between vegetation, climate, wildfire, and permafrost. The vegetation changes predicted here have the capacity to feed back to broader scale climate-forest interactions in the North American boreal forest, a region which contributes significantly to the global carbon and energy budgets.
机译:阿拉斯加的北部区域是由扰动,植被和土壤之间的相互作用。这些互动可能会在未来通过增加永久冻土融化,更频繁和强烈的野火,以及从干旱和竞争的植被变动。我们利用了一个基于树的植被模型,弗吉尼亚大学森林模型增强(UVAFME),估算内部阿拉斯加内部景点的当前和未来的森林条件。我们更新了UVAFME在内部阿拉斯加内部的应用,包括改进的Modafrost动力学,垃圾衰减,营养动态,火灾死亡率和火灾后再生的改进模拟。在这些更新之后,在物种特异性生物量和茎密度上的UVAFME输出与内部阿拉斯加内部各种森林类型的库存测量相当。然后,我们在特定库存地点和Tanana谷河流域上模拟森林对气候变化的反应,在2×2km(2)架上。我们从RCP 4.5和8.5场景下的CMIP5档案中取出的五种型号平均来的预计温度和降水。结果表明,气候变化和对野火和永久性动力学的伴随影响将导致生物量(特别是在内部Tanana谷内的生物量(特别是云杉(Picea SPP))的总体减少,尽管Quaking Aspen(Populus Temuloides)生物量增加,但是导致更高落叶部分的转变。仿真结果还预测生物质在冷,潮湿地点和高凸起的增加,并且在干燥位置的生物量下降,中度(RCP 4.5)和极端(RCP 8.5)气候变化情景。这些模拟表明,高度详细的物种交互式模型可用于阿拉斯加内的一个大区域,以研究植被,气候,野火和永久冻土之间的相互作用。这里预测的植被变化有能力回到北美北方森林中更广泛的气候森林互动,这是一个对全球碳和能源预算大大贡献的地区。

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