Reviews and syntheses: Carbonyl sulfide as a multi-scale tracer for carbon and water cycles
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Published:2018-06-18
Issue:12
Volume:15
Page:3625-3657
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Whelan Mary E.ORCID, Lennartz Sinikka T.ORCID, Gimeno Teresa E.ORCID, Wehr RichardORCID, Wohlfahrt GeorgORCID, Wang YutingORCID, Kooijmans Linda M. J.ORCID, Hilton Timothy W.ORCID, Belviso Sauveur, Peylin Philippe, Commane RóisínORCID, Sun WuORCID, Chen HuilinORCID, Kuai LeORCID, Mammarella Ivan, Maseyk KadmielORCID, Berkelhammer MaxORCID, Li King-FaiORCID, Yakir Dan, Zumkehr Andrew, Katayama Yoko, Ogée JérômeORCID, Spielmann Felix M.ORCID, Kitz Florian, Rastogi Bharat, Kesselmeier Jürgen, Marshall JuliaORCID, Erkkilä Kukka-MaariaORCID, Wingate LisaORCID, Meredith Laura K.ORCID, He WeiORCID, Bunk RüdigerORCID, Launois Thomas, Vesala Timo, Schmidt Johan A.ORCID, Fichot Cédric G., Seibt Ulli, Saleska Scott, Saltzman Eric S.ORCID, Montzka Stephen A.ORCID, Berry Joseph A.ORCID, Campbell J. Elliott
Abstract
Abstract. For the past decade, observations of carbonyl sulfide (OCS or COS)
have been investigated as a proxy for carbon uptake by plants. OCS
is destroyed by enzymes that interact with CO2 during
photosynthesis, namely carbonic anhydrase (CA) and RuBisCO, where CA
is the more important one. The majority of sources of OCS to the
atmosphere are geographically separated from this large plant sink,
whereas the sources and sinks of CO2 are co-located in
ecosystems. The drawdown of OCS can therefore be related to the
uptake of CO2 without the added complication of co-located
emissions comparable in magnitude. Here we review the state of our
understanding of the global OCS cycle and its applications to
ecosystem carbon cycle science. OCS uptake is correlated well to
plant carbon uptake, especially at the regional scale. OCS can be
used in conjunction with other independent measures of ecosystem
function, like solar-induced fluorescence and carbon and water
isotope studies. More work needs to be done to generate global
coverage for OCS observations and to link this powerful atmospheric
tracer to systems where fundamental questions concerning the carbon
and water cycle remain.
Funder
Division of Atmospheric and Geospace Sciences
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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