Variability and recent trends in the African carbon balance

Author:

Ciais P.,Piao S.-L.,Cadule P.,Friedlingstein P.,Chédin A.

Abstract

Abstract. We modeled the African carbon balance over the past century using the process based ORCHIDEE model, forced by changing climate and human induced changes in land use. The model includes a simple parameterization of natural fires, but the natural vegetation dynamics was ignored. The period analyzed is 1901–2002. Overall, we found that the African net carbon balance (Net Biome Productivity, NBP) increased from a net carbon source of −0.14 Pg C yr−1 in the 1980s to a net carbon sink of 0.15 Pg C yr−1 in the 1990s. Deforestation is estimated to be a source of 0.13 Pg C yr−1, implying a compensating effect of climate trends (mainly increasing precipitation) plus CO2 fertilization, causing a sink of 0.28 Pg C yr−1. We found that the interannual variability of NBP is mostly driven by photosynthesis changes. Over savannas, photosynthesis changes from one year to the next are strongly correlated with rainfall changes (R2=0.77 in northern Africa, and R2=0.42 in southern African savannas). Over forests, such a control by rainfall is not found. The main spatial pattern of interannual variability in NBP and in gross carbon fluxes is related with ENSO, with dryer conditions prevailing over savannas during El Niño and wetter conditions over forests. Climate induced variations in fire emissions respond to this ENSO forcing, but they do not determine strongly the NBP variations. Finally, we model that ecosystem respiration variations (mostly due to autotrophic respiration) are tailing with those of photosynthesis, on interannual as well as on decadal time scales, but this result is uncertain given the potential for acclimation for autotrophic respiration processes.

Publisher

Copernicus GmbH

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