Author:
Shen Miaogen,Piao Shilong,Jeong Su-Jong,Zhou Liming,Zeng Zhenzhong,Ciais Philippe,Chen Deliang,Huang Mengtian,Jin Chun-Sil,Li Laurent Z. X.,Li Yue,Myneni Ranga B.,Yang Kun,Zhang Gengxin,Zhang Yangjian,Yao Tandong
Abstract
In the Arctic, climate warming enhances vegetation activity by extending the length of the growing season and intensifying maximum rates of productivity. In turn, increased vegetation productivity reduces albedo, which causes a positive feedback on temperature. Over the Tibetan Plateau (TP), regional vegetation greening has also been observed in response to recent warming. Here, we show that in contrast to arctic regions, increased growing season vegetation activity over the TP may have attenuated surface warming. This negative feedback on growing season vegetation temperature is attributed to enhanced evapotranspiration (ET). The extra energy available at the surface, which results from lower albedo, is efficiently dissipated by evaporative cooling. The net effect is a decrease in daily maximum temperature and the diurnal temperature range, which is supported by statistical analyses of in situ observations and by decomposition of the surface energy budget. A daytime cooling effect from increased vegetation activity is also modeled from a set of regional weather research and forecasting (WRF) mesoscale model simulations, but with a magnitude smaller than observed, likely because the WRF model simulates a weaker ET enhancement. Our results suggest that actions to restore native grasslands in degraded areas, roughly one-third of the plateau, will both facilitate a sustainable ecological development in this region and have local climate cobenefits. More accurate simulations of the biophysical coupling between the land surface and the atmosphere are needed to help understand regional climate change over the TP, and possible larger scale feedbacks between climate in the TP and the Asian monsoon system.
Funder
Strategic Priority Research Program (B) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences
National Basic Program of China
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
433 articles.
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