TRANSPIRATION OF FICUS-BENJAMINA - COMPARISON OF MEASUREMENTS WITH PREDICTIONS OF THE PENMAN-MONTEITH MODEL AND A SIMPLIFIED VERSION

Citation
Bj. Bailey et al., TRANSPIRATION OF FICUS-BENJAMINA - COMPARISON OF MEASUREMENTS WITH PREDICTIONS OF THE PENMAN-MONTEITH MODEL AND A SIMPLIFIED VERSION, Agricultural and forest meteorology, 65(3-4), 1993, pp. 229-243
Citations number
15
Categorie Soggetti
Metereology & Atmospheric Sciences",Agriculture,Forestry
ISSN journal
01681923
Volume
65
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
1993
Pages
229 - 243
Database
ISI
SICI code
0168-1923(1993)65:3-4<229:TOF-CO>2.0.ZU;2-K
Abstract
The rates of transpiration of Ficus benjamina were measured in two gre enhouse experiments, one conducted in the UK in May, the other in Spai n during July. Transpiration was determined by weighing, and simultane ous measurements were made of solar and net radiation, air speed, wet and dry bulb air temperatures and stomatal resistance. Values of stoma tal resistance measured during the experiment in Spain were related to solar irradiance. The leaf external resistance obtained from an energ y balance analysis was found to agree more closely with values obtaine d for forced convection than for free convection. Solar irradiance and net radiation were found to be very similar in the greenhouse during the day. The Penman-Monteith equation was used to predict potential tr anspiration of the plants at the two experimental sites. Over the dayl ight period, the mean differences between the measured and predicted t ranspiration rates for the Silsoe and IRTA experiments were 2.8 and 3. 2% with root mean square deviations of 20 W m-2. The Penman-Monteith e quation was simplified by introducing parameter values appropriate to greenhouse conditions, and it was also generalised by explicitly incor porating the temperature dependence of the major temperature sensitive variables. The resulting equation requires values only for the temper ature and vapour pressure deficit of the air, global or net radiation, leaf area index and the leaf characteristic dimension. Without adjust ing any other parameters this simplified equation predicted the transp iration of F. benjamina in Spain and the UK to within +/- 5%.