TROLL 4.0: Representing water and carbon fluxes, leaf phenology, and intraspecific trait variation in a mixed-species individual-based forest dynamics model - Part 2: Model evaluation for two Amazonian sites
SCHMITT, Sylvain
Forêts et Sociétés [UPR Forêts et Sociétés]
Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme [Norway] [AMAP]
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Forêts et Sociétés [UPR Forêts et Sociétés]
Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme [Norway] [AMAP]
SCHMITT, Sylvain
Forêts et Sociétés [UPR Forêts et Sociétés]
Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme [Norway] [AMAP]
Forêts et Sociétés [UPR Forêts et Sociétés]
Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme [Norway] [AMAP]
DERROIRE, Géraldine
Forêts et Sociétés [UPR Forêts et Sociétés]
Ecologie des forêts de Guyane [UMR ECOFOG]
Forêts et Sociétés [UPR Forêts et Sociétés]
Ecologie des forêts de Guyane [UMR ECOFOG]
VINCENT, Grégoire
Botanique et Modélisation de l'Architecture des Plantes et des Végétations [UMR AMAP]
Botanique et Modélisation de l'Architecture des Plantes et des Végétations [UMR AMAP]
MARECHAUX, Isabelle
Botanique et Modélisation de l'Architecture des Plantes et des Végétations [UMR AMAP]
< Reduce
Botanique et Modélisation de l'Architecture des Plantes et des Végétations [UMR AMAP]
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
Geoscientific Model Development. 2025, vol. 18, n° 16, p. 5205-5243
European Geosciences Union
English Abstract
TROLL 4.0 is an individual-based forest dynamics model that jointly simulates the structure, diversity, and functioning of tropical forests, including their water balance, carbon fluxes, and leaf phenology, while accounting ...Read more >
TROLL 4.0 is an individual-based forest dynamics model that jointly simulates the structure, diversity, and functioning of tropical forests, including their water balance, carbon fluxes, and leaf phenology, while accounting for intraspecific trait variation for a large number of species. In a companion paper, we describe how the model represents the physiological and demographic processes that control the tree life cycle in a 1 m resolution spatially explicit scene and uses plant functional traits measurable in the field to parameterize such processes across species and individuals (Maréchaux et al., 2025). Here we evaluate the performance of TROLL 4.0 for two Amazonian sites with contrasting soil and climate properties. We assessed the model's ability to represent forest structure, composition, and dynamics using lidar-derived spatial distribution of top canopy height and forest inventories combined with information on plant functional traits. We also evaluated the model's ability to represent carbon and water fluxes, as well as leaf area variation, at daily and fortnightly resolution over a decade, using detailed information from on-site eddy covariance towers, satellite data, and ground-based or airborne lidar data. We finally compared the responses of carbon and water fluxes to environmental drivers between simulated and observed data. Overall, TROLL 4.0 provided a realistic representation of forests at both sites. The simulated canopy height distribution showed a high correlation coefficient (CC) with observed aerial and satellite data (CC > 0.92), while the species and functional composition were well represented (CC > 0.75). TROLL 4.0 also realistically simulated the seasonal variability of carbon and water fluxes (CC > 0.46) and their responses to environmental drivers, while capturing temporal variations in leaf area (CC > 0.76) and its partitioning into leaf age cohorts. However, TROLL 4.0 overestimated annual gross primary productivity at both sites (mean RMSEP = 0.94 ± 0.67 kgC m−2 yr−1) and evapotranspiration at one site (mean RMSEP = 0.75 ± 0.63 mm d−1), likely due to an underestimation of the soil water depletion and stomatal control during the dry season. This evaluation highlights the potential of TROLL 4.0 to represent ecosystem fluxes and the structure, diversity, and dynamics of plant communities at a fine resolution, paving the way for model predictions of the effects of climate change, fragmentation, and forest management on forest structure and dynamics.Read less <
Keywords
évapotranspiration
changement climatique
séquestration du carbone
télédétection
physiologie végétale
carbone
France
forêt
culture associée
Guyane française
modèle de simulation
inventaire forestier
pêche à la traîne
forêt tropicale
forêt tropicale humide
ANR Project
MUSE - ANR-16-IDEX-0006
CEnter of the study of Biodiversity in Amazonia
Towards a Unified theory of biotic Interactions: the roLe of environmental
Paysages Amazoniens en transition - ANR-21-CE32-0009
CEnter of the study of Biodiversity in Amazonia
Towards a Unified theory of biotic Interactions: the roLe of environmental
Paysages Amazoniens en transition - ANR-21-CE32-0009
Origin
Hal imported
