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Evaluation of terrestrial carbon cycle models through simulations of the seasonal cycle of atmospheric CO 2 : First results of a model intercomparison study
Author(s) -
Heimann M.,
Esser G.,
Haxeltine A.,
Kaduk J.,
Kicklighter D. W.,
Knorr W.,
Kohlmaier G. H.,
McGuire A. D.,
Melillo J.,
Moore B.,
Otto R. D.,
Prentice I. C.,
Sauf W.,
Schloss A.,
Sitch S.,
Wittenberg U.,
Würth G.
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
global biogeochemical cycles
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.512
H-Index - 187
eISSN - 1944-9224
pISSN - 0886-6236
DOI - 10.1029/97gb01936
Subject(s) - environmental science , biosphere model , biosphere , northern hemisphere , biogeochemical cycle , carbon cycle , atmospheric sciences , climatology , seasonality , primary production , atmosphere (unit) , latitude , annual cycle , atmospheric model , troposphere , forcing (mathematics) , ecosystem , meteorology , oceanography , geology , geography , ecology , geodesy , biology
Results of an intercomparison among terrestrial biogeochemical models (TBMs) are reported, in which one diagnostic and five prognostic models have been run with the same long‐term climate forcing. Monthly fields of net ecosystem production (NEP), which is the difference between net primary production (NPP) and heterotrophic respiration R H , at 0.5° resolution have been generated for the terrestrial biosphere. The monthly estimates of NEP in conjunction with seasonal CO 2 flux fields generated by the seasonal Hamburg Model of the Oceanic Carbon Cycle (HAMOCC3) and fossil fuel source fields were subsequently coupled to the three‐dimensional atmospheric tracer transport model TM2 forced by observed winds. The resulting simulated seasonal signal of the atmospheric CO 2 concentration extracted at the grid cells corresponding to the locations of 27 background monitoring stations of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory network is compared with measurements from these sites. The Simple Diagnostic Biosphere Model (SDBM1), which is tuned to the atmospheric CO 2 concentration at five monitoring stations in the northern hemisphere, successfully reproduced the seasonal signal of CO 2 at the other monitoring stations. The SDBM1 simulations confirm that the north‐south gradient in the amplitude of the atmospheric CO 2 signal results from the greater northern hemisphere land area and the more pronounced seasonality of radiation and temperature in higher latitudes. In southern latitudes, ocean‐atmosphere gas exchange plays an important role in determining the seasonal signal of CO 2 . Most of the five prognostic models (i.e., models driven by climatic inputs) included in the intercomparison predict in the northern hemisphere a reasonably accurate seasonal cycle in terms of amplitude and, to some extent, also with respect to phase. In the tropics, however, the prognostic models generally tend to overpredict the net seasonal exchanges and stronger seasonal cycles than indicated by the diagnostic model and by observations. The differences from the observed seasonal signal of CO 2 may be caused by shortcomings in the phenology algorithms of the prognostic models or by not properly considering the effects of land use and vegetation fires on CO 2 fluxes between the atmosphere and terrestrial biosphere.