Frontiers in Environmental Science (Dec 2022)

Encoding diel hysteresis and the Birch effect in dryland soil respiration models through knowledge-guided deep learning

  • Peishi Jiang,
  • Xingyuan Chen,
  • Justine E. C. Missik,
  • Justine E. C. Missik,
  • Zhongming Gao,
  • Heping Liu,
  • Brittany A Verbeke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2022.1035540
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Soil respiration in dryland ecosystems is challenging to model due to its complex interactions with environmental drivers. Knowledge-guided deep learning provides a much more effective means of accurately representing these complex interactions than traditional Q10-based models. Mutual information analysis revealed that future soil temperature shares more information with soil respiration than past soil temperature, consistent with their clockwise diel hysteresis. We explicitly encoded diel hysteresis, soil drying, and soil rewetting effects on soil respiration dynamics in a newly designed Long Short Term Memory (LSTM) model. The model takes both past and future environmental drivers as inputs to predict soil respiration. The new LSTM model substantially outperformed three Q10-based models and the Community Land Model when reproducing the observed soil respiration dynamics in a semi-arid ecosystem. The new LSTM model clearly demonstrated its superiority for temporally extrapolating soil respiration dynamics, such that the resulting correlation with observational data is up to 0.7 while the correlations of the Q10-based models and the Community Land Model (CLM) are less than 0.4. Our results underscore the high potential for knowledge-guided deep learning to replace Q10-based soil respiration modules in Earth system models.

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