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Monitoring and predicting the effect of climate extremes on ecosystems

UT researchers Dr. Yijian Zeng, Prof. Dr. Bob Su, Dr. Christiaan van der Tol, Prof. Dr. Raul Zurita-Milla and Dr. Michael Ying Yang (all from ITC Faculty) have been awarded a grant from Netherlands eScience Center’s ASDI 2020 call. In their research project, they will combine two computer models to understand how water-carbon dynamics of ecosystems vary with climate extremes, such as droughts and heatwaves.

Droughts and heatwaves impact how water, energy and carbon move through ecosystems. Climate extremes like these jeopardize the ability of ecosystems to remove carbon dioxide from the atmosphere to mitigate or even reverse climate change. New models can trace these exchanges. SCOPE – one of these models – simulates the photosynthetic activity of vegetation and links it to satellite data. Another model is STEMMUS, which traces the soil moisture availability for plants. “Models like SCOPE and STEMMUS work great, but are limited to one specific aspect of the problems we are trying to solve”, explains Zeng, the principal investigator. In this new project called EcoExtreML, the researchers will combine both models to release their full potential.

K.W. Wesselink - Schram MSc (Kees)
Science Communication Officer (available Mon-Fri)

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