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Satellite Observations of the Tropical Terrestrial Carbon Balance and Interactions with the Water Cycle During the 21st Century

Authors :
Kristen Fahy
Michael Keller
John Worden
Rong Fu
Mathew Williams
Sarah Worden
Helen M. Worden
David Schimel
Pierre Gentine
A. Anthony Bloom
Joshua B. Fisher
Nicholas C. Parazoo
Yi Yin
Kevin W. Bowman
Gregory R. Quetin
John T. Reager
Junjie Liu
Sassan Saatchi
Mingjie Shi
Alexandra G. Konings
Armineh Barkhordarian
Source :
Worden, J, Saatchi, S, Keller, M, Bloom, A, Fu, R, Worden, S, Liu, J, Parazoo, N, Fisher, J B, Worden, H, Yin, Y, Bowman, K, Gentine, P, Konings, A G, Quetin, G R, Williams, M, Reager, J T, Barkhordarian, A, Fahy, K, Shi, M & Schimel, D 2021, ' Satellite Observations of the Tropical Terrestrial Carbon Balance and Interactions with the Water Cycle During the 21st Century ', Reviews of Geophysics . https://doi.org/10.1029/2020RG000711
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

A constellation of satellites are now in orbit providing information about terrestrial carbon and water storage and fluxes. These combined observations show that the tropical biosphere has changed significantly in the last two decades from the combined effects of climate variability and land use. Large areas of forest have been cleared in both wet and dry forests, increasing the source of carbon to the atmosphere. Concomitantly, tropical fire emissions have declined, at least until 2016, from changes in land‐use practices and rainfall, increasing the net carbon sink. Measurements of carbon stocks and fluxes from disturbance and recovery and of vegetation photosynthesis show significant regional variability of net biosphere exchange (NBE) and gross primary productivity (GPP) across the tropics and are tied to seasonal and interannual changes in water fluxes and storage. Comparison of satellite based estimates of evapotranspiration (ET), photosynthesis, and the deuterium content of water vapor with patterns of total water storage and rainfall demonstrate the presence of vegetation‐atmosphere interactions and feedback mechanisms across tropical forests. However, these observations of stocks, fluxes and inferred interactions between them do not point unambiguously to either positive or negative feedbacks in carbon and water exchanges. These ambiguities highlight the need for assimilation of these new measurements with Earth System models for a consistent assessment of process interactions, along with focused field campaigns that integrate ground, aircraft and satellite measurements, to quantify the controlling carbon and water processes and their feedback mechanisms.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Worden, J, Saatchi, S, Keller, M, Bloom, A, Fu, R, Worden, S, Liu, J, Parazoo, N, Fisher, J B, Worden, H, Yin, Y, Bowman, K, Gentine, P, Konings, A G, Quetin, G R, Williams, M, Reager, J T, Barkhordarian, A, Fahy, K, Shi, M & Schimel, D 2021, ' Satellite Observations of the Tropical Terrestrial Carbon Balance and Interactions with the Water Cycle During the 21st Century ', Reviews of Geophysics . https://doi.org/10.1029/2020RG000711
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6f3bc2db5c469c4fa939a3ffc72e8134