Do State‐Of‐The‐Art Atmospheric CO2 Inverse Models Capture Drought Impacts on the European Land Carbon Uptake?

Author:

He Wei123ORCID,Jiang Fei124ORCID,Ju Weimin12ORCID,Byrne Brendan5ORCID,Xiao Jingfeng6ORCID,Nguyen Ngoc Tu7ORCID,Wu Mousong12ORCID,Wang Songhan8ORCID,Wang Jun12ORCID,Rödenbeck Christian9ORCID,Li Xing10,Scholze Marko11ORCID,Monteil Guillaume11ORCID,Wang Hengmao12ORCID,Zhou Yanlian2ORCID,He Qiaoning12,Chen Jing M.1314ORCID

Affiliation:

1. International Institute for Earth System Science Nanjing University Nanjing China

2. Jiangsu Provincial Key Laboratory of Geographic Information Science and Technology Key Laboratory for Land Satellite Remote Sensing Applications of Ministry of Natural Resources School of Geography and Ocean Science Nanjing University Nanjing China

3. State Key Laboratory of Remote Sensing Science Jointly Sponsored by Beijing Normal University and Aerospace Information Research Institute Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

4. Frontiers Science Center for Critical Earth Material Cycling Nanjing University Nanjing China

5. Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Pasadena CA USA

6. Earth Systems Research Center Institute for the Study of Earth, Oceans, and Space University of New Hampshire Durham NH USA

7. State Key Laboratory of Hydrology‐Water Resources and Hydraulic Engineering College of Hydrology and Water Resources Hohai University Nanjing China

8. Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center for Modern Crop Production Key Laboratory of Crop Physiology and Ecology in Southern China Nanjing Agricultural University Nanjing China

9. Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry Jena Germany

10. Research Institute of Agriculture and Life Sciences Seoul National University Seoul South Korea

11. Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science Lund University Lund Sweden

12. School of Urban and Environmental Sciences Huaiyin Normal University Huaian China

13. Department of Geography and Planning University of Toronto Toronto ON Canada

14. School of Geographical Sciences Fujian Normal University Fuzhou China

Abstract

AbstractThe European land carbon uptake has been heavily impacted by several recent severe droughts, yet quantitative estimates of carbon uptake anomalies are uncertain. Atmospheric CO2 inverse models (AIMs) provide observation‐based estimates of the large‐scale carbon flux dynamics, but how well they capture drought impacts on the terrestrial carbon uptake is poorly known. Here we assessed the capacity of state‐of‐the‐art AIMs in monitoring drought impacts on the European carbon uptake over 2001–2015 using observations of environmental variability and vegetation function and made comparisons with bottom‐up estimates of carbon uptake anomalies. We found that global inversions with only limited surface CO2 observations give divergent estimates of drought impacts. Regional inversions assimilating denser CO2 observations over Europe demonstrated some improved consistency, with all inversions capturing a reduction in carbon uptake during the 2012 drought. However, they failed to capture the reduction caused by the 2015 drought. Finally, we found that a set of inversions that assimilated satellite XCO2 or assimilated environmental variables plus surface CO2 observations better captured carbon uptake anomalies induced by both the 2012 and 2015 droughts. In addition, the recent Orbiting Carbon Observatory—2 XCO2 inversions showed good potential in capturing drought impacts, with better performances for larger‐scale droughts like the 2018 drought. These results suggest that surface CO2 observations may still be too sparse to fully capture the impact of drought on the carbon cycle at subcontinental scales over Europe, and satellite XCO2 and ancillary environmental data can be used to improve observational constraints in atmospheric inversion systems.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

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

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