ORCHIDEE MICT-LEAK (r5459), a global model for the production, transport, and transformation of dissolved organic carbon from Arctic permafrost regions – Part 2: Model evaluation over the Lena River basin
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Published:2020-02-10
Issue:2
Volume:13
Page:507-520
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ISSN:1991-9603
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Container-title:Geoscientific Model Development
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geosci. Model Dev.
Author:
Bowring Simon P. K., Lauerwald Ronny, Guenet BertrandORCID, Zhu DanORCID, Guimberteau MatthieuORCID, Regnier Pierre, Tootchi Ardalan, Ducharne Agnès, Ciais Philippe
Abstract
Abstract. In this second part of a two-part study, we performed a simulation of the
carbon and water budget of the Lena catchment with the land surface model
ORCHIDEE MICT-LEAK, enabled to simulate dissolved organic carbon (DOC)
production in soils and its transport and fate in high-latitude inland
waters. The model results are evaluated for their ability to reproduce the
fluxes of DOC and carbon dioxide (CO2) along the soil–inland-water
continuum and the exchange of CO2 with the atmosphere, including the
evasion outgassing of CO2 from inland waters. We present simulation
results over the years 1901–2007 and show that the model is able to broadly
reproduce observed state variables and their emergent properties across a
range of interacting physical and biogeochemical processes. These include (1) net primary production (NPP), respiration and riverine hydrologic amplitude,
seasonality, and inter-annual variation; (2) DOC concentrations, bulk annual
flow, and their volumetric attribution at the sub-catchment level; (3) high
headwater versus downstream CO2 evasion, an emergent phenomenon
consistent with observations over a spectrum of high-latitude observational
studies. These quantities obey emergent relationships with environmental
variables like air temperature and topographic slope that have been
described in the literature. This gives us confidence in reporting the
following additional findings: of the ∼34 Tg C yr−1 left
over as input to soil matter after NPP is diminished by heterotrophic
respiration, 7 Tg C yr−1 is leached and transported into the aquatic
system. Of this, over half (3.6 Tg C yr−1) is evaded from the inland
water surface back into the atmosphere and the remainder (3.4 Tg C yr−1)
flushed out into the Arctic Ocean, mirroring empirically derived studies.
These riverine DOC exports represent ∼1.5 % of NPP. DOC
exported from the floodplains is dominantly sourced from recent more
“labile” terrestrial production in contrast to DOC leached from the rest of
the watershed with runoff and drainage, which is mostly sourced from
recalcitrant soil and litter. All else equal, both historical climate change
(a spring–summer warming of 1.8 ∘C over the catchment) and rising
atmospheric CO2 (+85.6 ppm) are diagnosed from factorial simulations
to contribute similar significant increases in DOC transport via primary
production, although this similarity may not hold in the future.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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