Partitioning of ocean and land uptake of CO 2 as inferred by δ 13 C measurements from the NOAA Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory Global Air Sampling Network
Author(s) -
Ciais Philippe,
Tans Pieter P.,
White James W. C.,
Trolier Michael,
Francey Roger J.,
Berry Joe A.,
Randall David R.,
Sellers Piers J.,
Collatz James G.,
Schimel David S.
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/94jd02847
Subject(s) - biosphere , environmental science , biosphere model , latitude , atmospheric sciences , sampling (signal processing) , atmosphere (unit) , climatology , meteorology , geology , geography , physics , optics , geodesy , astronomy , detector
Using δ 13 C measurements in atmospheric CO 2 from a cooperative global air sampling network, we determined the partitioning of the net uptake of CO 2 between ocean and land as a function of latitude and time. The majority of δ 13 C measurements were made at the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR) of the University of Colorado. The network included 40 sites in 1992 and constitutes the most extensive data set available. We perform an inverse deconvolution of both CO 2 and δ 13 C observations, using a two‐dimensional model of atmospheric transport. New features of the method include a detailed calculation of the isotopic disequilibrium of the terrestrial biosphere from global runs of the CENTURY soil model. Also, the discrimination against 13 C by plant photosynthesis, as a function of latitude and time, is calculated from global runs of the SiB biosphere model. Uncertainty due to the longitudinal structure of the data, which is not represented by the model, is studied through a bootstrap analysis by adding and omitting measurement sites. The resulting error estimates for our inferred sources and sinks are of the order of 1 GTC (1 GTC = 10 15 gC). Such error bars do not reflect potential systematic errors arising from our estimates of the isotopic disequilibria between the atmosphere and the oceans and biosphere, which are estimated in a separate sensitivity analysis. With respect to global totals for 1992 we found that 3.1 GTC of carbon dissolved into the ocean and that 1.5 GTC were sequestered by land ecosystems. Northern hemisphere ocean gyres north of 15°N absorbed 2.7 GTC. The equatorial oceans between 10°S and 10°N were a net source to the atmosphere of 0.9 GTC. We obtained a sink of 1.6 GTC in southern ocean gyres south of 20°S, although the deconvolution is poorly constrained by sparse data coverage at high southern latitudes. The seasonal uptake of CO 2 in northern gyres appears to be correlated with a bloom of phytoplankton in surface waters. On land, northern temperate and boreal ecosystems between 35°N and 65°N were found to be a major sink of CO 2 in 1992, as large as 3.5 GTC. Northern tropical ecosystems (equator‐30°N) appear to be a net source to the atmosphere of 2 GTC which could reflect biomass burning. A small sink, 0.3 GTC, was inferred for southern tropical ecosystems (30°S‐equator).
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