Earth system model simulations show different feedback strengths of the terrestrial carbon cycle under glacial and interglacial conditions
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Published:2018-04-25
Issue:2
Volume:9
Page:413-425
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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:
Adloff MarkusORCID, Reick Christian H., Claussen MartinORCID
Abstract
Abstract. In simulations with the MPI Earth System Model, we study the feedback between
the terrestrial carbon cycle and atmospheric CO2 concentrations under
ice age and interglacial conditions. We find different sensitivities of
terrestrial carbon storage to rising CO2 concentrations in the two
settings. This result is obtained by comparing the transient response of the
terrestrial carbon cycle to a fast and strong atmospheric CO2
concentration increase (roughly 900 ppm) in Coupled Climate Carbon Cycle Model Intercomparison Project (C4MIP)-type simulations
starting from climates representing the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) and
pre-industrial times (PI). In this set-up we disentangle terrestrial
contributions to the feedback from the carbon-concentration effect, acting
biogeochemically via enhanced photosynthetic productivity when CO2
concentrations increase, and the carbon–climate effect, which affects the
carbon cycle via greenhouse warming. We find that the carbon-concentration
effect is larger under LGM than PI conditions because photosynthetic
productivity is more sensitive when starting from the lower, glacial
CO2 concentration and CO2 fertilization saturates later. This
leads to a larger productivity increase in the LGM experiment. Concerning the
carbon–climate effect, it is the PI experiment in which land carbon responds
more sensitively to the warming under rising CO2 because at the
already initially higher temperatures, tropical plant productivity
deteriorates more strongly and extratropical carbon is respired more
effectively. Consequently, land carbon losses increase faster in the PI than
in the LGM case. Separating the carbon–climate and carbon-concentration
effects, we find that they are almost additive for our model set-up; i.e. their synergy is small in the global sum of carbon changes. Together,
the two effects result in an overall strength of the terrestrial carbon cycle
feedback that is almost twice as large in the LGM experiment as in the PI
experiment. For PI, ocean and land contributions to the total feedback are of
similar size, while in the LGM case the terrestrial feedback is dominant.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
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