Lehuger, S.; Gabrielle, B.; Van Oijen, M.; Makowski, D.; Germon, J.-C.; Morvan, T.; Hénault, C.. 2009 Bayesian calibration of the nitrous oxide emission module of an agro-ecosystem model. Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment, 133 (3-4). 208-222. 10.1016/j.agee.2009.04.022
Abstract
Nitrous oxide (N2O) is the main biogenic greenhouse gas contributing to the global warming potential
(GWP) of agro-ecosystems. Evaluating the impact of agriculture on climate therefore requires a capacity
to predict N2O emissions in relation to environmental conditions and crop management. Biophysical
models simulating the dynamics of carbon and nitrogen in agro-ecosystems have a unique potential to
explore these relationships, but are fraught with high uncertainties in their parameters due to their
variations over time and space. Here, we used a Bayesian approach to calibrate the parameters of the N2O
submodel of the agro-ecosystem model CERES-EGC. The submodel simulates N2O emissions from the
nitrification and denitrification processes, which are modelled as the product of a potential rate with
three dimensionless factors related to soil water content, nitrogen content and temperature. These
equations involve a total set of 15 parameters, four of which are site-specific and should be measured on
site, while the other 11 are considered global, i.e. invariant over time and space. We first gathered prior
information on the model parameters based on the literature review, and assigned them uniform
probability distributions. A Bayesian method based on the Metropolis–Hastings algorithm was
subsequently developed to update the parameter distributions against a database of seven different
field-sites in France. Three parallel Markov chains were run to ensure a convergence of the algorithm.
This site-specific calibration significantly reduced the spread in parameter distribution, and the
uncertainty in the N2O simulations. The model’s root mean square error (RMSE) was also abated by 73%
across the field sites compared to the prior parameterization. The Bayesian calibration was subsequently
applied simultaneously to all data sets, to obtain better global estimates for the parameters initially
deemed universal. This made it possible to reduce the RMSE by 33% on average, compared to the
uncalibrated model. These global parameter values may be used to obtain more realistic estimates of
N2O emissions from arable soils at regional or continental scales.
Documents
7957:4294
Information
Programmes:
UNSPECIFIED
Library
Statistics
Downloads per month over past year
Metrics
Altmetric Badge
Dimensions Badge
Share
![]() |
