Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
82073 Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 2011 19 Pages PDF
Abstract

We divided the canopy of a 50-year-old secondary Fagus crenata stand into an array of small three dimensional (3D) rectangular cells (termed voxels, 0.25 m × 0.25 m × 0.20 m in height), and determined the leaf area density (LAD) of all voxels using the vertical point quadrat method. The estimated LAD values showed good agreement, at both voxel and stand scales, with measured values obtained by destructive sampling and litter trapping, respectively. The 3D distribution of LAD was then imported into a ray-tracing program based on a turbid medium analogy to simulate photosynthetic photon flux density at leaf surface (PPFDleaf) within a voxel at 30-min intervals. To include finite leaf size and non-random leaf dispersion within a voxel in the light calculation, the angular dependency of the shoot silhouette to projection area ratio (SPAR), with the foliage volume the same as the voxel, was used as the light extinction coefficient in the analogy. In addition, the frequency distribution of PPFDleaf within a voxel was simulated at each interval for all leafy voxels in the canopy, by integrating a Monte-Carlo simulation of the voxel-shading fraction of a solar disc in the light calculations. The light simulation provided reasonable estimates of both the mean PPFDleaf and the frequency distribution of PPFDleaf in a voxel for evaluating canopy photosynthesis (Pcanopy), when comparing them to the measured values. Ignoring the within-voxel variation in PPFDleaf caused a 21.8% overestimation of Pcanopy during the summer period (July to September). The results demonstrate the potential importance of a detailed description of light heterogeneity in Pcanopy calculations.

Research highlights▶ The 50-year-old Fagus crenata's canopy was described with an array of small three dimensional rectangular cells (termed voxels), using the vertical point quadrat method. ▶ Not only sunlit/shaded fraction but also penumbral fraction of irradiance was calculated for each leafy voxel in the canopy at 30-min intervals, using a Monte-Carlo ray tracing approach. ▶ We showed that ignoring the within-voxel variation in leaf irradiance may lead to large overestimation of canopy photosynthesis.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Atmospheric Science
Authors
, , ,