1 / 29

Hybrid modelling of plantation crops

Hybrid modelling of plantation crops. Euan Mason University of Canterbury. Outline. Hybrid models Current hybrid modelling projects at the School of Forestry Stand level hybrid growth and yield Hybrid initial growth models. Potential for hybrid models. Geographic Information Systems

aulii
Download Presentation

Hybrid modelling of plantation crops

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hybrid modelling of plantation crops Euan Mason University of Canterbury

  2. Outline • Hybrid models • Current hybrid modelling projects at the School of Forestry • Stand level hybrid growth and yield • Hybrid initial growth models

  3. Potential for hybrid models • Geographic Information Systems • More known about each site and stand • Variation in growth pattern from site to site • Less need for regional models • Variation in weather from year to year • Predicting the past • Variation in monthly climate offers monthly predictions • Climate change may affect growth patterns • Kyoto protocol • Carbon storage explicit in some models

  4. An example “hybrid” model 3-PG Model (Landsberg & Waring 1997) Allocation varies with fertility

  5. Application of 3-PG 25-year old experiment

  6. Potential issues with 3-PG • Allocation of C is derived from allometry • Recursiveness, compounded errors • Over parametarisation • Fertility is inadequately represented • Stand and stem geometry are not modelled • Circularity • DBH->Carbon, Carbon->DBH • Measurement of LAI may partially solve this

  7. Current HM projects at SoF • Physiological hybrid Initial Growth Model • Comparisons between hybrid and traditional G & Y models • Modelling effects of nutrition • Modelling effects of spacing and genotype on corewood properties • National hybrid model for P. radiata • Modelling clonal stands

  8. Physiological hybrid IGM

  9. Comparisons of hybrid models • Guy Pinjuv, PhD candidate • Canterbury estate, highly variable sites • Comparison of a range of hybrids • Traditional growth and yield • 3-PG • Several alternatives in between • Evaluate fit and utility • Two types of validation required

  10. Modelling effects of nutrition • Horacio Bown, PhD candidate • Development of fertility modifier for hybrid models • Long-term goal • Controlled environment • Field experiments

  11. Corewood stiffness vs actual stocking & clone – J.P. Lasserre

  12. Modelling clonal stands • Rajesh Sharma • What changes are needed when modelling for clonal forest management? • Potential for hybrid modelling to provide genotype-specific models • Large plot clonal experiment - SPBL • 10 clones, pure and mixed clone blocks • Planted 1993 • Variation in growth, form, wood quality • Interchange in dominance • Competition with self or other genotypes • Local genotype-dependent individual tree model • Risk

  13. National hybrid model for radiata pine • Postdoctoral Fellow • Dr Helge Dzierzon • Can hybrid modelling remove need for regions? • Are hybrids more effective that traditional methods within regions? • How much local sensitivity do we lose by adopting a national hybrid model? • PSP data from 13 companies • Monthly weather data from climate stations, with local offsets • Elevation and soils from GIS

  14. Weather stations used • Reasonable data coverage from 1960 to 2005 • Stations over all New Zealand • Data availability for each station is heterogeneous

  15. Landcare Research Soil Layer • Aim: Investigate growth patterns over New Zealand • Format: • ESRI polygon layer • 8 Soil Classes (NZSCORD) • 67 Subclasses (NZSC) covered by PSPs

  16. Results for MTH using LCR Layer – the ultimate regional approach • Regression for SC: • MSE=2.03 • N: 3202 • N classes: 26 • Residuals for SC • From 20955 to 13182

  17. Results for G using LCR Layer • Regression of SC: • MSE=9.70 • N: 3202 • N classes: 26 Residuals for SC • From 360825 to 302916 • Residuals of Simulation run • Mean: 356021 • Std: 9154

  18. An idea among many • Time = accumulated light • Use 3-PG type quantum efficiency modifiers to accumulate potentiallyused light • Use sigmoidal difference equations as usual, fitted to PSP data • Avoids some of 3-PG’s problems • Compounded errors • Allocation of C • Overparametarisation • Lack of stand geometry

  19. An idea among many • Estimate genetic components of seasonal variations in primary and secondary growth • Different radiation sums for primary and secondary growth

  20. Seasonal growth in dbh (red), height (yellow) and 3-PG predictions (blue). (Tennent 1986)

  21. An idea among many • Climatic variables as well as stocking and radiation sum estimates in mortality model • To what extent can temporal variation in climatic influences inform us about influences on crop growth and mortality of spatial variation in climate?

  22. An idea among many • Compatible stand, distribution & individual tree projection systems • Models that represent height vs basal area growth as functions of site variables • Models that respond to climatic and local weather variation • Models specific to each site • Models that naturally provide growth estimates within years

  23. Preliminary Example – P. radiata in Central North Island Von-Bertalanffy-Richards Daytime temp, VPD modifiers Schumacher, daytime temperature modifier

  24. MTH: Results using light sum models - Dzierzon • Regression example • MSE: 1.40 • N: 2146 • Residuals: • From 4427.0 to 4118

  25. G: Results using light sum models - Dzierzon • Regression Example • MSE: 5.05 • N: 2146 • Residuals: • From 57796 to 54822

  26. Light sum initial growth model: Competition for light in R1835/2

  27. Future directions • Two fertile strands for forest modelling research • Internal qualities of stems • Physiological hybrids • The University of Canterbury contributes to both • Challenge is to bring the two strands together

  28. Future directions • Hybrids may obviate a regional approach to growth and yield • Hybrids may provide an alternative or be complementary to 300 (500) index/Site index approach • Climatic and silvicultural effects may be more easily integrated in hybrid models than in traditional G & Y models • Site conditions mediate use of light

  29. Summary • Several key studies in hybrid modelling • Hybrid modelling • More sensitive to local site conditions • Seasonal (monthly) predictions • Reduced need for regions? • Better estimates of growth since last inventory? • Carbon sequestration explicit? • Linkages between mensuration, silviculture and physiology

More Related