Uncertainty and Emergent Constraints on Enhanced Ecosystem Carbon Stock by Land Greening

Author:

Bian Chenyu12ORCID,Xia Jianyang12ORCID,Zhang Xuanze3ORCID,Huang Kun12ORCID,Cui Erqian12ORCID,Zhou Jian124ORCID,Wei Ning12ORCID,Wang Ying‐Ping5ORCID,Lombardozzi Danica6ORCID,Goll Daniel S.7ORCID,Knauer Jürgen8ORCID,Arora Vivek9,Yuan Wenping10,Sitch Stephen11ORCID,Friedlingstein Pierre12ORCID,Luo Yiqi4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Zhejiang Tiantong Forest Ecosystem National Observation and Research Station Institute of Eco‐Chongming School of Ecological and Environmental Sciences East China Normal University Shanghai China

2. Research Center for Global Change and Complex Ecosystems East China Normal University Shanghai China

3. Key Laboratory of Water Cycle and Related Land Surface Processes Institute of Geographical Sciences and Natural Resources Research Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

4. School of Integrative Plant Science Cornell University NY Ithaca USA

5. CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere VIC Aspendale Australia

6. Terrestrial Sciences Section Climate and Global Dynamics National Center for Atmospheric Research CO Boulder USA

7. LSCE/IPSL CEA‐CNRS‐UVSQ Université Paris Saclay Gif sur Yvette France

8. CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere ACT Canberra Australia

9. Climate Research Division, Environment and Climate Change Canada Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis BC Victoria Canada

10. Guangdong Province Key Laboratory for Climate Change and Natural Disaster Studies Zhuhai Key Laboratory of Dynamics Urban Climate and Ecology School of Atmospheric Sciences Sun Yat‐sen University Zhuhai China

11. College of Life and Environmental Sciences University of Exeter Exeter UK

12. College of Engineering, Mathematics and Physical Sciences University of Exeter Exeter UK

Abstract

AbstractSignificant land greening since the 1980s has been detected through satellite observation, forest inventory, and Earth system modeling. However, whether and to what extent global land greening enhances ecosystem carbon stock remains uncertain. Here, using 40 global models, we first detected a positive correlation between the terrestrial ecosystem carbon stock and leaf area index (LAI) over time. Then, we diagnose the source of uncertainty of simulated the sensitivities of ecosystem carbon stock to LAI based on a traceability analysis. We found that the sensitivity of gross primary productivity (GPP) to LAI is the largest contributor to the model uncertainty in more than 60% of the vegetated grids. Using the ensemble of four long‐term global data sets of GPP and three satellite LAI products from 1982 to 2014, we provided an emergent constraint on the ecosystem carbon stock increase as 0.75 ± 0.46 kg C m−2 per unit LAI over global land areas. Furthermore, the biome‐based results reveal that the tropical forest regions have the highest inter‐model variation and model bias. Overall, this study identifies the uncertainty source and provides constrained estimates of the greening effect on ecosystem carbon stock at the global scale.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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