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Recent trends and drivers of regional sources and sinks of carbon dioxide

Authors :
Sitch, S.
Friedlingstein, P.
Gruber, N.
Jones, S.D.
Murray-Tortarolo, G.
Ahlström, A.
Doney, S.C.
Graven, H.
Heinze, C.
Huntingford, C.
Levis, S.
Levy, P.E.
Lomas, M.
Poulter, B.
Viovy, N.
Zaehle, S.
Zeng, N.
Arneth, A.
Bonan, G.
Bopp, L.
Canadell, J.G.
Chevallier, F.
Ciais, P.
Ellis, R.
Gloor, M.
Peylin, P.
Piao, S.L.
Le Quéré, C.
Smith, B.
Zhu, Z.
Myneni, R.
Sitch, S.
Friedlingstein, P.
Gruber, N.
Jones, S.D.
Murray-Tortarolo, G.
Ahlström, A.
Doney, S.C.
Graven, H.
Heinze, C.
Huntingford, C.
Levis, S.
Levy, P.E.
Lomas, M.
Poulter, B.
Viovy, N.
Zaehle, S.
Zeng, N.
Arneth, A.
Bonan, G.
Bopp, L.
Canadell, J.G.
Chevallier, F.
Ciais, P.
Ellis, R.
Gloor, M.
Peylin, P.
Piao, S.L.
Le Quéré, C.
Smith, B.
Zhu, Z.
Myneni, R.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The land and ocean absorb on average just over half of the anthropogenic emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2) every year. These CO2 "sinks" are modulated by climate change and variability. Here we use a suite of nine dynamic global vegetation models (DGVMs) and four ocean biogeochemical general circulation models (OBGCMs) to estimate trends driven by global and regional climate and atmospheric CO2 in land and oceanic CO2 exchanges with the atmosphere over the period 1990–2009, to attribute these trends to underlying processes in the models, and to quantify the uncertainty and level of inter-model agreement. The models were forced with reconstructed climate fields and observed global atmospheric CO2; land use and land cover changes are not included for the DGVMs. Over the period 1990–2009, the DGVMs simulate a mean global land carbon sink of −2.4 ± 0.7 Pg C yr−1 with a small significant trend of −0.06 ± 0.03 Pg C yr−2 (increasing sink). Over the more limited period 1990–2004, the ocean models simulate a mean ocean sink of −2.2 ± 0.2 Pg C yr−1 with a trend in the net C uptake that is indistinguishable from zero (−0.01 ± 0.02 Pg C yr−2). The two ocean models that extended the simulations until 2009 suggest a slightly stronger, but still small, trend of −0.02 ± 0.01 Pg C yr−2. Trends from land and ocean models compare favourably to the land greenness trends from remote sensing, atmospheric inversion results, and the residual land sink required to close the global carbon budget. Trends in the land sink are driven by increasing net primary production (NPP), whose statistically significant trend of 0.22 ± 0.08 Pg C yr−2 exceeds a significant trend in heterotrophic respiration of 0.16 ± 0.05 Pg C yr−2 – primarily as a consequence of widespread CO2 fertilisation of plant production. Most of the land-based trend in simulated net carbon uptake originates from natural ecosystems in the tropics (−0.04 ± 0.01 Pg C yr−2), with almost no trend over the northern land region, where rece

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, text, English, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn921274355
Document Type :
Electronic Resource