Diazotrophy as a key driver of the response of marine net primary productivity to climate change
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Published:2022-09-09
Issue:17
Volume:19
Page:4267-4285
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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:
Bopp Laurent, Aumont Olivier, Kwiatkowski Lester, Clerc Corentin, Dupont Léonard, Ethé Christian, Gorgues Thomas, Séférian RolandORCID, Tagliabue Alessandro
Abstract
Abstract. The impact of anthropogenic climate change on marine net primary
production (NPP) is a reason for concern because changing NPP will have
widespread consequences for marine ecosystems and their associated services.
Projections by the current generation of Earth system models have suggested
decreases in global NPP in response to future climate change, albeit with
very large uncertainties. Here, we make use of two versions of the Institut
Pierre-Simon Laplace Climate Model (IPSL-CM) that simulate divergent NPP
responses to similar high-emission scenarios in the 21st century and
identify nitrogen fixation as the main driver of these divergent NPP
responses. Differences in the way N fixation is parameterised in the marine
biogeochemical component PISCES (Pelagic Interactions Scheme for Carbon and Ecosystem Studies) of the IPSL-CM versions lead to N-fixation rates
that are either stable or double over the course of the 21st century,
resulting in decreasing or increasing global NPP, respectively. An
evaluation of these two model versions does not help constrain future NPP
projection uncertainties. However, the use of a more comprehensive version
of PISCES, with variable nitrogen-to-phosphorus ratios as well as a revised
parameterisation of the temperature sensitivity of N fixation, suggests only
moderate changes in globally averaged N fixation in the 21st century. This
leads to decreasing global NPP, in line with the model-mean changes of a
recent multi-model intercomparison. Lastly, despite contrasting trends in
NPP, all our model versions simulate similar and significant reductions in
planktonic biomass. This suggests that projected plankton biomass may be a
more robust indicator than NPP of the potential impact of anthropogenic
climate change on marine ecosystems across models.
Funder
HORIZON EUROPE Framework Programme Agence Nationale de la Recherche
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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