Methods in Ecology and Evolution (Oct 2024)

Physically based modelling of spectral transmittance through forest canopies

  • Aarne Hovi,
  • Růžena Janoutová,
  • Zbyněk Malenovský,
  • Daniel Schraik,
  • Jean‐Philippe Gastellu‐Etchegorry,
  • Nicolas Lauret,
  • Jan Novotný,
  • Miina Rautiainen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/2041-210X.14402
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 10
pp. 1859 – 1872

Abstract

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Abstract Physically based models simulating the spectral transmittance of solar radiation through forest canopies are useful tools for examining the connections between the shortwave radiation environment and the productivity and biodiversity of the forest floor. We report a comprehensive evaluation of two approaches simulating forest canopy spectral transmittance. The approaches were (i) three‐dimensional radiative transfer modelling in canopies composed of individual trees filled with turbid media and (ii) photon recollision probability theory (p‐theory), and were implemented using DART‐FT and PARAS models, respectively. The simulations were evaluated against mean and standard deviation of canopy transmittance spectra measured under clear‐sky conditions in forest plots across central and Northern Europe. In general, both models agreed well with the in situ measurements. They performed equally in conifer forests, while PARAS had a slightly lower accuracy than DART‐FT in broadleaved forests. We conclude that both approaches produce realistic simulations of canopy spectral transmittance at the spatial scale tested in this study, and that p‐theory constitutes a computationally efficient and easy‐to‐parameterize alternative to three‐dimensional radiative transfer.

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