Impact of temperature and water availability on microwave-derived gross primary production

<p>Vegetation optical depth (VOD) from microwave satellite observations has received much attention in global vegetation studies in recent years due to its relationship to vegetation water content and biomass. We recently have shown that VOD is related to plant productivity, i.e., gross primar...

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Main Authors: I. E. Teubner, M. Forkel, B. Wild, L. Mösinger, W. Dorigo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2021-06-01
Series:Biogeosciences
Online Access:https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/3285/2021/bg-18-3285-2021.pdf
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author I. E. Teubner
I. E. Teubner
M. Forkel
B. Wild
L. Mösinger
W. Dorigo
spellingShingle I. E. Teubner
I. E. Teubner
M. Forkel
B. Wild
L. Mösinger
W. Dorigo
Impact of temperature and water availability on microwave-derived gross primary production
Biogeosciences
author_facet I. E. Teubner
I. E. Teubner
M. Forkel
B. Wild
L. Mösinger
W. Dorigo
author_sort I. E. Teubner
title Impact of temperature and water availability on microwave-derived gross primary production
title_short Impact of temperature and water availability on microwave-derived gross primary production
title_full Impact of temperature and water availability on microwave-derived gross primary production
title_fullStr Impact of temperature and water availability on microwave-derived gross primary production
title_full_unstemmed Impact of temperature and water availability on microwave-derived gross primary production
title_sort impact of temperature and water availability on microwave-derived gross primary production
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Biogeosciences
issn 1726-4170
1726-4189
publishDate 2021-06-01
description <p>Vegetation optical depth (VOD) from microwave satellite observations has received much attention in global vegetation studies in recent years due to its relationship to vegetation water content and biomass. We recently have shown that VOD is related to plant productivity, i.e., gross primary production (GPP). Based on this relationship between VOD and GPP, we developed a theory-based machine learning model to estimate global patterns of GPP from passive microwave VOD retrievals. The VOD-GPP model generally showed good agreement with site observations and other global data sets in temporal dynamic but tended to overestimate annual GPP across all latitudes. We hypothesized that the reason for the overestimation is the missing effect of temperature on autotrophic respiration in the theory-based machine learning model. Here we aim to further assess and enhance the robustness of the VOD-GPP model by including the effect of temperature on autotrophic respiration within the machine learning approach and by assessing the interannual variability of the model results with respect to water availability. We used X-band VOD from the VOD Climate Archive (VODCA) data set for estimating GPP and used global state-of-the-art GPP data sets from FLUXCOM and MODIS to assess residuals of the VOD-GPP model with respect to drought conditions as quantified by the Standardized Precipitation and Evaporation Index (SPEI).</p> <p>Our results reveal an improvement in model performance for correlation when including the temperature dependency of autotrophic respiration (average correlation increase of 0.18). This improvement in temporal dynamic is larger for temperate and cold regions than for the tropics. For unbiased root-mean-square error (ubRMSE) and bias, the results are regionally diverse and are compensated in the global average. Improvements are observed in temperate and cold regions, while decreases in performance are obtained mainly in the tropics. The overall improvement when adding temperature was less than expected and thus may only partly explain previously observed differences between the global GPP data sets. On interannual timescales, estimates of the VOD-GPP model agree well with GPP from FLUXCOM and MODIS. We further find that the residuals between VOD-based GPP estimates and the other data sets do not significantly correlate with SPEI, which demonstrates that the VOD-GPP model can capture responses of GPP to water availability even without including additional information on precipitation, soil moisture or evapotranspiration. Exceptions from this rule were found in some regions: significant negative correlations between VOD-GPP residuals and SPEI were observed in the US corn belt, Argentina, eastern Europe, Russia and China, while significant positive correlations were obtained in South America, Africa and Australia. In these regions, the significant correlations may indicate different plant strategies for dealing with variations in water availability.</p> <p>Overall, our findings support the robustness of global microwave-derived estimates of gross primary production for large-scale studies on climate–vegetation interactions.</p>
url https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/3285/2021/bg-18-3285-2021.pdf
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spelling doaj-c45b75edf64a4b3693737eee0a6b49bb2021-06-04T09:32:38ZengCopernicus PublicationsBiogeosciences1726-41701726-41892021-06-01183285330810.5194/bg-18-3285-2021Impact of temperature and water availability on microwave-derived gross primary productionI. E. Teubner0I. E. Teubner1M. Forkel2B. Wild3L. Mösinger4W. Dorigo5Department of Geodesy and Geoinformation, TU Wien, Wiedner Hauptstraße 8, 1040 Vienna, AustriaZentralanstalt für Meteorologie und Geodynamik (ZAMG), Hohe Warte 38, 1190 Vienna, AustriaEnvironmental Remote Sensing Group, Institute of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Technische Universität Dresden, Helmholtzstraße 10, 01069 Dresden, GermanyDepartment of Geodesy and Geoinformation, TU Wien, Wiedner Hauptstraße 8, 1040 Vienna, AustriaDepartment of Geodesy and Geoinformation, TU Wien, Wiedner Hauptstraße 8, 1040 Vienna, AustriaDepartment of Geodesy and Geoinformation, TU Wien, Wiedner Hauptstraße 8, 1040 Vienna, Austria<p>Vegetation optical depth (VOD) from microwave satellite observations has received much attention in global vegetation studies in recent years due to its relationship to vegetation water content and biomass. We recently have shown that VOD is related to plant productivity, i.e., gross primary production (GPP). Based on this relationship between VOD and GPP, we developed a theory-based machine learning model to estimate global patterns of GPP from passive microwave VOD retrievals. The VOD-GPP model generally showed good agreement with site observations and other global data sets in temporal dynamic but tended to overestimate annual GPP across all latitudes. We hypothesized that the reason for the overestimation is the missing effect of temperature on autotrophic respiration in the theory-based machine learning model. Here we aim to further assess and enhance the robustness of the VOD-GPP model by including the effect of temperature on autotrophic respiration within the machine learning approach and by assessing the interannual variability of the model results with respect to water availability. We used X-band VOD from the VOD Climate Archive (VODCA) data set for estimating GPP and used global state-of-the-art GPP data sets from FLUXCOM and MODIS to assess residuals of the VOD-GPP model with respect to drought conditions as quantified by the Standardized Precipitation and Evaporation Index (SPEI).</p> <p>Our results reveal an improvement in model performance for correlation when including the temperature dependency of autotrophic respiration (average correlation increase of 0.18). This improvement in temporal dynamic is larger for temperate and cold regions than for the tropics. For unbiased root-mean-square error (ubRMSE) and bias, the results are regionally diverse and are compensated in the global average. Improvements are observed in temperate and cold regions, while decreases in performance are obtained mainly in the tropics. The overall improvement when adding temperature was less than expected and thus may only partly explain previously observed differences between the global GPP data sets. On interannual timescales, estimates of the VOD-GPP model agree well with GPP from FLUXCOM and MODIS. We further find that the residuals between VOD-based GPP estimates and the other data sets do not significantly correlate with SPEI, which demonstrates that the VOD-GPP model can capture responses of GPP to water availability even without including additional information on precipitation, soil moisture or evapotranspiration. Exceptions from this rule were found in some regions: significant negative correlations between VOD-GPP residuals and SPEI were observed in the US corn belt, Argentina, eastern Europe, Russia and China, while significant positive correlations were obtained in South America, Africa and Australia. In these regions, the significant correlations may indicate different plant strategies for dealing with variations in water availability.</p> <p>Overall, our findings support the robustness of global microwave-derived estimates of gross primary production for large-scale studies on climate–vegetation interactions.</p>https://bg.copernicus.org/articles/18/3285/2021/bg-18-3285-2021.pdf