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Spatially explicit re-harmonized terrestrial carbon densities for calibrating Integrated human-Earth System Models.

Authors :
Narayan, Kanishka B.
Di Vittorio, Alan V.
Margiotta, Evan
Spawn-Lee, Seth
Gibbs, Holly K.
Source :
Earth System Science Data Discussions. 7/17/2023, p1-37. 37p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Soil and vegetation carbon densities play a critical role in global and regional human-Earth system models. These densities affect variables such as land use change emissions and also influence land use change pathways under climate forcing scenarios where terrestrial carbon is assigned a carbon price. Recently, more spatially explicit, fine resolution data have become available for both soil and vegetation carbon. However, for models to effectively use these data the fine resolution data need to be reharmonized to the initial land use and land cover conditions represented by these models. Without such reharmonization the carbon values may be inaccurate for particular land types and places where the source data and the model disagree on the land use/cover type. Here we present reharmonized soil and vegetation carbon densities both at the 5-arcmin resolution grid cell level and also aggregated to 235 water sheds for 4 land use types and 15 land cover types. These data are particularly useful as initial land carbon conditions for global Multisectoral Dynamic Models (MSD). Moreover, these data include six different statistical states calculated using distinct resampling methods for each of the land use and land cover types. These statistical states are used to define a range of possible carbon values for each land classification, and any state can be used for defining initial conditions of soil and vegetation carbon in MSD models. Users can also estimate any percentile of the carbon distribution defined by these six summary states. We make use of these statistical states to calculate spatially distinct uncertainties in the carbon densities by land type. We have implemented these data in a state-of-the-art multi sector dynamics model, namely the Global Change Analysis Model (GCAM), and show that these new data improve several land use responses in the model, especially when terrestrial carbon is assigned a carbon price. The statistical states in our data are validated against similar estimates in the literature both at a grid cell level and at a regional level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18663591
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Earth System Science Data Discussions
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
164974966
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/essd-2023-251