A Multi-Model Gap-Filling Strategy Increases the Accuracy of GPP Estimation from Periodic Chamber-Based Flux Measurements on Sphagnum-Dominated Peatland
2025, Albert-Saiz, Mar, Stróżecki, Marcin Grzegorz, Rastogi, Anshu, Juszczak, Radosław
Gross primary productivity (GPP), the primary driver of carbon accumulation, governs the sequestration of atmospheric CO2 into biomass. However, GPP cannot be measured directly, as photosynthesis and respiration are simultaneous. At canopy level in plot-scale studies, GPP can be estimated through the closed chamber-based measurements of net ecosystem exchange (NEE) and ecosystem respiration (Reco). This technique is cost-effective and widely used in small-scale studies with short vegetation, but measurements are periodic-based and require temporal interpolations. The rectangular hyperbolic model (RH) was the basis of this study, developing two temperature-dependent factors following a linear and exponential shift in GPP when the temperature oscillates from the optimum for vegetation performance. Additionally, a water table depth (WTD)-dependent model and an exponential model were tested. In the peak season, modified RH models showed the best performance, while for the rest of the year, the best model varied for each subplot. The statistical results demonstrate the limitations of assuming the light-use efficiency as a fixed shape mechanism (using only one model). Therefore, a multi-model approach with the best performance model selected for each period is proposed to improve GPP estimations for peatlands.
Photosynthetic Responses of Peat Moss (Sphagnum spp.) and Bog Cranberry (Vaccinium oxycoccos L.) to Spring Warming
2024, Antala, Michal, Abdelmajeed, Abdallah Yussuf Ali, Stróżecki, Marcin Grzegorz, Krzesiński, Włodzimierz, Juszczak, Radosław, Rastogi, Anshu
The rising global temperature makes understanding the impact of warming on plant physiology in critical ecosystems essential, as changes in plant physiology can either help mitigate or intensify climate change. The northern peatlands belong to the most important parts of the global carbon cycle. Therefore, knowledge of the ongoing and future climate change impacts on peatland vegetation photosynthesis is crucial for further refinement of peatland or global carbon cycle and vegetation models. As peat moss (Sphagnum spp.) and bog cranberry (Vaccinium oxycoccos L.) represent some of the most common plant functional groups of peatland vegetation, we examined the impact of experimental warming on the status of their photosynthetic apparatus during the early vegetation season. We also studied the differences in the winter to early spring transition of peat moss and bog cranberry photosynthetic activity. We have shown that peat moss starts photosynthetic activity earlier because it relies on light-dependent energy dissipation through the winter. However, bog cranberry needs a period of warmer temperature to reach full activity due to the sustained, non-regulated, heat dissipation during winter, as suggested by the doubling of photosystem II efficiency and 36% decrease in sustained heat dissipation between the mid-March and beginning of May. The experimental warming further enhanced the performance of photosystem II, indicated by a significant increase in the photosystem II performance index on an absorption basis due to warming. Therefore, our results suggest that bog cranberry can benefit more from early spring warming, as its activity is sped up more compared to peat moss. This will probably result in faster shrub encroachment of the peatlands in the warmer future. The vegetation and carbon models should take into account the results of this research to predict the peatland functions under changing climate conditions.