Radiation-use efficiency is sensitive to variations in atmospheric concentrations and equations have been incorporated into SWAT+ to modify the default radiation-use efficiency values in the plant database for climate change studies. The relationship used to adjust the radiation-use efficiency for effects of elevated is (Stockle et al., 1992):
5:2.1.4
where is the radiation-use efficiency of the plant (kg/ha⋅(MJ/m) or 10 g/MJ), is the concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere (ppmv), and and are shape coefficients.
The shape coefficients are calculated by solving equation 5:2.1.4 using two known points (, ) and (, ):
5:2.1.5
5:2.1.6
where is the first shape coefficient, is the second shape coefficient, is the ambient atmospheric concentration (ppmv), is the radiation-use efficiency of the plant at ambient atmospheric concentration (kg/ha⋅(MJ/m) or 10 g/MJ), is an elevated atmospheric concentration (ppmv), is the radiation-use efficiency of the plant at the elevated atmospheric concentration, , (kg/ha⋅(MJ/m) or 10 g/MJ). Equation 5:2.1.4 was developed when the ambient atmospheric concentration was 330 ppmv and is valid for carbon dioxide concentrations in the range 330-660 ppmv. Even though the ambient atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide is now higher than 330 ppmv, this value is still used in the calculation. If the concentration used in the simulation is less than 330 ppmv, the model defines RUE = .
Stockle and Kiniry (1990) have shown that a plant’s radiation-use efficiency is affected by vapor pressure deficit. For a plant, a threshold vapor pressure deficit is defined at which the plant’s radiation-use efficiency begins to drop in response to the vapor pressure deficit. The adjusted radiation-use efficiency is calculated:
if 5:2.1.7
if 5:2.1.8
where is the radiation-use efficiency adjusted for vapor pressure deficit (kg/ha⋅(MJ/m) or 10 g/MJ), is the radiation-use efficiency for the plant at a vapor pressure deficit of 1 kPa (kg/ha⋅(MJ/m) or 10 g/MJ), is the rate of decline in radiation-use efficiency per unit increase in vapor pressure deficit (kg/ha⋅(MJ/m)⋅kPa or (10 g/MJ)⋅kPa), is the vapor pressure deficit (kPa), and is the threshold vapor pressure deficit above which a plant will exhibit reduced radiation-use efficiency (kPa). The radiation-use efficiency value reported for the plant in the plant growth database, , or adjusted for elevated carbon dioxide levels (equation 5:2.1.4) is the value used for . The threshold vapor pressure deficit for reduced radiation-use efficiency is assumed to be 1.0 kPa for all plants ().
The radiation-use efficiency is never allowed to fall below 27% of . This minimum value was based on field observations (Kiniry, personal communication, 2001).