Titolo | Assessing the role of soil water limitation in determining the Phytotoxic Ozone Dose (PODY) thresholds |
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Tipo di pubblicazione | Articolo su Rivista peer-reviewed |
Anno di Pubblicazione | 2016 |
Autori | De Marco, Alessandra, Sicard P., Fares S., Tuovinen J.-P., Anav A., and Paoletti E. |
Rivista | Atmospheric Environment |
Volume | 147 |
Paginazione | 88-97 |
ISSN | 13522310 |
Parole chiave | Abies alba, Fagus sylvatica, forestry, Mediterranean forest, Ozone, Ozone risk assessment, Phytotoxic ozone dose, Pinus cembra, Quercus ilex, Risk assessment, Risk perception, Soil moisture, Soil water content, Soils, Threshold |
Abstract | Phytotoxic Ozone Dose (PODY), defined as the accumulated stomatal ozone flux over a threshold of Y, is considered an optimal metric to evaluate O3 effects on vegetation. PODY is often computed through the DO3SE model, which includes species-specific parameterizations for the environmental response of stomatal conductance. However, the effect of soil water content (SWC) on stomatal aperture is difficult to model on a regional scale and thus often ignored. In this study, we used environmental input data obtained from the WRF-CHIMERE model for 14,546 grid-based forest sites in Southern Europe. SWC was obtained for the upper 10 cm of soil, which resulted in a worst-case risk scenario. PODY was calculated either with or without water limitation for different Y thresholds. Exclusion of the SWC effect on stomatal fluxes caused a serious overestimation of PODY. The difference increased with increasing Y (78%, 128%, 237% and 565% with Y = 0, 1, 2 and 3 nmol O3 m−2 s−1, respectively). This behaviour was confirmed by applying the same approach to field data measured in a Mediterranean Quercus ilex forest. WRF-CHIMERE overestimated SWC at this field site, so under real-world conditions the SWC effect may be larger than modelled. The differences were lower for temperate species (Pinus cembra 50–340%, P. sylvestris 57–363%, Abies alba 57–371%) than for Mediterranean species (P. pinaster 87–356%, P. halepensis 96–429%, P. pinea 107–532%, Q. suber 104–1602%), although a high difference was recorded also for the temperate species Fagus sylvatica with POD3 (524%). We conclude that SWC should be considered in PODY simulations and a low Y threshold should be used for robustness. © 2016 Elsevier Ltd |
Note | cited By 1 |
URL | https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84989808079&doi=10.1016%2fj.atmosenv.2016.09.066&partnerID=40&md5=ffa34847fdaa4700cf215cba735135a8 |
DOI | 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2016.09.066 |
Citation Key | DeMarco201688 |