Ecological Informatics (Sep 2024)

VCPNET: A new dataset to benchmark vegetation carbon phenology metrics

  • Xuan Tang,
  • Gregory Starr,
  • Christina L. Staudhammer,
  • Kaidi Zhang,
  • Longwei Li,
  • Nan Li,
  • Fathielrahaman H. Ajloon,
  • Yuan Gong

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 82
p. 102741

Abstract

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Shifts in plant phenology associated with climate change have received unprecedented attention from land managers, policymakers, and the scientific community, with important implications for the structure and function of the biosphere. Eddy covariance (EC) has been used to measure carbon exchange between the land surface and atmosphere, which provides an opportunity to describe the seasonality of ecosystem processes. Using BASE flux products provided by the AmeriFlux network and a non-linear modeling approach, this study developed a vegetation carbon phenology (VCP) dataset, which we termed VCPNET (version 1.0). VCPNET was developed with fine spatial and temporal scales for a total of 87 EC sites (2820 site-years of data) across North America, including nine vegetation types. We extracted phenology metrics by site to provide long-term VCP metrics across these ecosystems. Analyses revealed significant differences in photosynthetic capacity and respiration rate-derived VCP metrics across the landscape, as well as differences associated with whether daily cumulative or half-hourly maximum measurements were used. Daily carbon fluxes may be more consistent in simulating phenology behavior than 30-min maximum fluxes across all vegetation types, except in sites classified as Grassland. Overall vegetation types, the seasonality of photosynthetic capacity may exert a larger control on the net carbon uptake of the ecosystem compared to the respiration rate. Thus, model-estimated photosynthesis-activated seasons may better represent true phenology, particularly the development of above- and below-ground plant biomass in tree-covered areas, which is crucial in forecasting ecosystem carbon sequestration. In addition, a nonlinear model can robustly capture day-to-day variation in carbon flux; however, precise simulation of phenological patterns with multiple peaks, typically observed in disturbed ecosystems, must be addressed during model optimization. The cross-ecosystem phenology metrics provided by VCPNET could be utilized for regional-global analysis and calibration of satellite-based vegetation indices, which accurately scale land surface phenology. Our findings provide a prospective tool for a deeper understanding of ecosystem function, allowing a direction and foundation for optimizing phenology models and algorithms and ultimately contributing to developing new ecological theories and practices in response to climate change.

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