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A dynamic model of annual foliage growth and carbon uptake in trees

A dynamic model of annual foliage growth and carbon uptake in trees
A dynamic model of annual foliage growth and carbon uptake in trees
The growth of trees and other plants occurs through the interactive combination of photosynthesis and carbon (and other nutrient) assimilation. Photosynthesis enables the production of carbohydrate that can then be used in growing foliage, whereby photosynthesis is enabled. We construct a mathematical model of carbon uptake and storage, which allows the prediction of the growth dynamics of trees. We find that the simplest model allows uncontrolled foliage production through the positive feedback outlined above, but that leaf shading provides an automatic saturation to carbon assimilation, and hence to foliage production. The model explains the necessity for finite leaf area production at outbreak, and it explains why foliage density reaches a constant value during a growing season, while also non-leaf tissue also continues to grow. It also explains why trees will die when their carbon stores are depleted below a certain threshold, because the cost of foliage growth and maintenance exceeds the dynamic supply of carbon by photosynthesis.
1742-5689
1087-1096
Fowler, A.C.
1a305c38-f676-4d12-a062-5bdb48cb67e9
Clary, O.
d06a31f7-e64c-4e07-9f62-f657a129f493
Roose, T.
3581ab5b-71e1-4897-8d88-59f13f3bccfe
Fowler, A.C.
1a305c38-f676-4d12-a062-5bdb48cb67e9
Clary, O.
d06a31f7-e64c-4e07-9f62-f657a129f493
Roose, T.
3581ab5b-71e1-4897-8d88-59f13f3bccfe

Fowler, A.C., Clary, O. and Roose, T. (2009) A dynamic model of annual foliage growth and carbon uptake in trees. Journal of the Royal Society Interface, 6 (40), 1087-1096. (doi:10.1098/rsif.2009.0010).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The growth of trees and other plants occurs through the interactive combination of photosynthesis and carbon (and other nutrient) assimilation. Photosynthesis enables the production of carbohydrate that can then be used in growing foliage, whereby photosynthesis is enabled. We construct a mathematical model of carbon uptake and storage, which allows the prediction of the growth dynamics of trees. We find that the simplest model allows uncontrolled foliage production through the positive feedback outlined above, but that leaf shading provides an automatic saturation to carbon assimilation, and hence to foliage production. The model explains the necessity for finite leaf area production at outbreak, and it explains why foliage density reaches a constant value during a growing season, while also non-leaf tissue also continues to grow. It also explains why trees will die when their carbon stores are depleted below a certain threshold, because the cost of foliage growth and maintenance exceeds the dynamic supply of carbon by photosynthesis.

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Published date: November 2009

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 145127
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/145127
ISSN: 1742-5689
PURE UUID: f53d4fef-ed7e-42d6-ab8b-0d60ac480a8d
ORCID for T. Roose: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8710-1063

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Date deposited: 22 Apr 2010 15:41
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:54

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Contributors

Author: A.C. Fowler
Author: O. Clary
Author: T. Roose ORCID iD

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