148 articles – 163 references  [version française]

inria-00547631, version 1

Simulation and Visualisation of Functional Landscapes: Effects of the Water Resource Competition between Plants

Vincent Le Chevalier (Author to contact preferably) 12, Marc Jaeger () 3, Xing Mei 4, Paul-Henry Cournède () 12

JCST 22, 6 (2007) 835-845

Abstract: Vegetation ecosystem simulation and visualisation are challenging topics involving multidisciplinary aspects. In this paper, we present a new generic frame for the simulation of natural phenomena through manageable and interacting models. It focuses on the functional growth of large vegetal ecosystems, showing coherence for scales ranging from the individual plant to communities and with a particular attention to the effects of water resource competition between plants. The proposed approach is based on a model of plant growth in interaction with the environmental conditions. These are deduced from the climatic data (light, temperature, rainfall) and a model of soil hydrological budget. A set of layers is used to store the water resources and to build the interfaces between the environmental data and landscape components: temperature, rain, light, altitude, lakes, plant positions, biomass, cycles, etc. At the plant level, the simulation is performed for each individual by a structural-functional growth model, interacting with the plant's environment. Temperature is spatialised, changing according to altitude, and thus locally controls plant growth speed. The competition for water is based on a soil hydrological model taking into account rainfalls, water runoff, absorption, diffusion, percolation in soil. So far, the incoming light radiation is not studied in detail and is supposed constant. However, competition for light between plants is directly taken into account in the plant growth model. In our implementation, we propose a simple architecture for such a simulator and a simulation scheme to synchronise the water resource updating (on a temporal basis) and the plant growth cycles (determined by the sum of daily temperatures). The visualisation techniques are based on sets of layers, allowing both morphological and functional landscape views and providing interesting tools for ecosystem management. The implementation of the proposed frame leads to encouraging results that are presented and illustrate simple academic cases.

  • 1:  Mathématiques Appliquées aux Systèmes - EA 4037 (MAS)
  • Ecole Centrale Paris
  • 2:  DIGIPLANTE (INRIA Saclay - Ile de France)
  • INRIA – Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement [CIRAD] : UMR – Ecole Centrale Paris
  • 3:  BotAnique et BioinforMatique de l'Architecture des Plantes (AMAP)
  • Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement [CIRAD] : UMR51 – CNRS : UMR5120 – Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] – Institut national de la recherche agronomique (INRA) : UR0931 – Université Montpellier II - Sciences et techniques
  • 4:  Laboratoire Franco-Chinois d'Informatique, d'Automatique et de Mathématiques Appliquées (LIAMA)
  • Institute of Automation, Chinese Academy of Sciences – Chinese Academy of Science (CAS) – Institut national de la recherche agronomique (INRA) – INRIA – Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement [CIRAD] – CNRS
  • Domain : Computer Science/Modeling and Simulation
    Life Sciences/Ecology, environment/Ecosystems
 
  • inria-00547631, version 1
  • oai:hal.inria.fr:inria-00547631
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  • Submitted on: Thursday, 16 December 2010 23:17:21
  • Updated on: Friday, 17 December 2010 12:29:20