Woods Hole Research Center, P.O. Box 296, 02543, Woods Hole, MA, USA.
Photosynth Res. 1994 Mar;39(3):321-50. doi: 10.1007/BF00014590.
Responses of individual leaves to short-term changes in CO2 partial pressure have been relatively well studied. Whole-plant and plant community responses to elevated CO2 are less well understood and scaling up from leaves to canopies will be complicated if feedbacks at the small scale differ from feedbacks at the large scale. Mathematical models of leaf, canopy, and ecosystem processes are important tools in the study of effects on plants and ecosystems of global environmental change, and in particular increasing atmospheric CO2, and might be used to scale from leaves to canopies. Models are also important in assessing effects of the biosphere on the atmosphere. Presently, multilayer and big leaf models of canopy photosynthesis and energy exchange exist. Big leaf models - which are advocated here as being applicable to the evaluation of impacts of 'global change' on the biosphere - simplify much of the underlying leaf-level physics, physiology, and biochemistry, yet can retain the important features of plant-environment interactions with respect to leaf CO2 exchange processes and are able to make useful, quantitative predictions of canopy and community responses to environmental change. The basis of some big leaf models of photosynthesis, including a new model described herein, is that photosynthetic capacity and activity are scaled vertically within a canopy (by plants themselves) to match approximately the vertical profile of PPFD. The new big leaf model combines physically based models of leaf and canopy level transport processes with a biochemically based model of CO2 assimilation. Predictions made by the model are consistent with canopy CO2 exchange measurements, although a need exists for further testing of this and other canopy physiology models with independent measurements of canopy mass and energy exchange at the time scale of 1 h or less.
个体叶片对 CO2 分压短期变化的响应已经得到了相对较好的研究。而植物整体和植物群落对 CO2 升高的响应则理解得较少,如果小尺度的反馈与大尺度的反馈不同,那么将叶片尺度的响应扩展到冠层将会变得复杂。叶片、冠层和生态系统过程的数学模型是研究全球环境变化(特别是大气 CO2 增加)对植物和生态系统影响的重要工具,并且可以用于将叶片尺度扩展到冠层尺度。模型在评估生物圈对大气的影响方面也很重要。目前,存在多层和大叶片冠层光合作用和能量交换模型。大叶片模型——在这里被倡导为适用于评估“全球变化”对生物圈的影响——简化了许多底层的叶片水平物理学、生理学和生物化学,但可以保留植物-环境相互作用的重要特征,涉及叶片 CO2 交换过程,并能够对冠层和群落对环境变化的响应进行有用的、定量的预测。一些光合作用大叶片模型的基础,包括本文中描述的新模型,是冠层内(由植物自身)垂直地缩放光合能力和活性,以大致匹配 PPFD 的垂直分布。新的大叶片模型将叶片和冠层水平传输过程的物理基础模型与 CO2 同化的生物化学基础模型相结合。该模型的预测与冠层 CO2 交换测量结果一致,尽管需要进一步测试该模型和其他冠层生理学模型,以独立测量 1 小时或更短时间尺度的冠层质量和能量交换。