Reimagining Earth in the Earth System

Author:

Bonan Gordon B.1ORCID,Lucier Oliver2,Coen Deborah R.2,Foster Adrianna C.1ORCID,Shuman Jacquelyn K.13,Laguë Marysa M.4ORCID,Swann Abigail L. S.5ORCID,Lombardozzi Danica L.16ORCID,Wieder William R.17ORCID,Dahlin Kyla M.8ORCID,Rocha Adrian V.9ORCID,SanClements Michael D.10ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder CO USA

2. History of Science and Medicine Yale University New Haven CT USA

3. Earth Science Division National Aeronautics and Space Administration Ames Research Center Moffett Field CA USA

4. Department of Atmospheric Sciences University of Utah Salt Lake City UT USA

5. Department of Atmospheric Sciences & Department of Biology University of Washington Seattle WA USA

6. Department of Ecosystem Science & Sustainability Colorado State University Fort Collins CO USA

7. Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

8. Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences Michigan State University East Lansing MI USA

9. Department of Biological Sciences University of Notre Dame Notre Dame IN USA

10. National Ecological Observatory Network, Battelle Boulder CO USA

Abstract

AbstractTerrestrial, aquatic, and marine ecosystems regulate climate at local to global scales through exchanges of energy and matter with the atmosphere and assist with climate change mitigation through nature‐based climate solutions. Climate science is no longer a study of the physics of the atmosphere and oceans, but also the ecology of the biosphere. This is the promise of Earth system science: to transcend academic disciplines to enable study of the interacting physics, chemistry, and biology of the planet. However, long‐standing tension in protecting, restoring, and managing forest ecosystems to purposely improve climate evidences the difficulties of interdisciplinary science. For four centuries, forest management for climate betterment was argued, legislated, and ultimately dismissed, when nineteenth century atmospheric scientists narrowly defined climate science to the exclusion of ecology. Today's Earth system science, with its roots in global models of climate, unfolds in similar ways to the past. With Earth system models, geoscientists are again defining the ecology of the Earth system. Here we reframe Earth system science so that the biosphere and its ecology are equally integrated with the fluid Earth to enable Earth system prediction for planetary stewardship. Central to this is the need to overcome an intellectual heritage to the models that elevates geoscience and marginalizes ecology and local land knowledge. The call for kilometer‐scale atmospheric and ocean models, without concomitant scientific and computational investment in the land and biosphere, perpetuates the geophysical view of Earth and will not fully provide the comprehensive actionable information needed for a changing climate.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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