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Physical robustness of canopy temperature models for crop heat stress simulation across environments and production conditions.

Authors :
Webber, Heidi
White, Jeffrey W.
Kimball, Bruce A.
Ewert, Frank
Asseng, Senthold
Eyshi Rezaei, Ehsan
Jr.Pinter, Paul J.
Hatfield, Jerry L.
Reynolds, Matthew P.
Ababaei, Behnam
Bindi, Marco
Doltra, Jordi
Ferrise, Roberto
Kage, Henning
Kassie, Belay T.
Kersebaum, Kurt-Christian
Luig, Adam
Olesen, Jørgen E.
Semenov, Mikhail A.
Stratonovitch, Pierre
Source :
Field Crops Research. Feb2018, Vol. 216, p75-88. 14p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Despite widespread application in studying climate change impacts, most crop models ignore complex interactions among air temperature, crop and soil water status, CO 2 concentration and atmospheric conditions that influence crop canopy temperature. The current study extended previous studies by evaluating T c simulations from nine crop models at six locations across environmental and production conditions. Each crop model implemented one of an empirical (EMP), an energy balance assuming neutral stability (EBN) or an energy balance correcting for atmospheric stability conditions (EBSC) approach to simulate T c . Model performance in predicting T c was evaluated for two experiments in continental North America with various water, nitrogen and CO2 treatments. An empirical model fit to one dataset had the best performance, followed by the EBSC models. Stability conditions explained much of the differences between modeling approaches. More accurate simulation of heat stress will likely require use of energy balance approaches that consider atmospheric stability conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03784290
Volume :
216
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Field Crops Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126669570
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fcr.2017.11.005