Comparison of uncertainties in land-use change fluxes from bookkeeping model parameterisation
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Published:2021-06-30
Issue:2
Volume:12
Page:745-762
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ISSN:2190-4987
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Container-title:Earth System Dynamics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Earth Syst. Dynam.
Author:
Bastos AnaORCID, Hartung KerstinORCID, Nützel Tobias B.ORCID, Nabel Julia E. M. S.ORCID, Houghton Richard A.ORCID, Pongratz JuliaORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Fluxes from deforestation, changes in land cover, land use and
management practices (FLUC for simplicity) contributed to approximately 14 % of anthropogenic CO2 emissions in 2009–2018. Estimating FLUC accurately in space and in time remains, however, challenging, due to multiple sources of uncertainty in the calculation of these fluxes. This uncertainty, in turn, is propagated to global and regional carbon budget estimates, hindering the compilation of a consistent carbon budget and preventing us from constraining other terms, such as the natural land sink. Uncertainties in FLUC estimates arise from many different sources, including differences in model structure (e.g. process based vs. bookkeeping) and model parameterisation. Quantifying the uncertainties from each source requires controlled simulations to separate their effects. Here, we analyse differences between the two bookkeeping models used regularly in the global carbon budget estimates since 2017: the model by
Hansis et al. (2015) (BLUE) and that by Houghton and Nassikas (2017) (HN2017). The two models have a very similar structure and philosophy, but differ significantly both with respect to FLUC intensity and spatiotemporal variability. This is due to differences in the land-use forcing but also in the model parameterisation. We find that the larger emissions in BLUE compared to HN2017 are largely due to differences in C densities between natural and managed vegetation or
primary and secondary vegetation, and higher allocation of cleared and
harvested material to fast turnover pools in BLUE than in HN2017. Besides
parameterisation and the use of different forcing, other model assumptions
cause differences: in particular that BLUE represents gross transitions
which leads to overall higher carbon losses that are also more quickly
realised than HN2017.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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