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Transient climate change and net ecosystem production of the terrestrial biosphere
Author(s) -
Xiao X.,
Melillo J. M.,
Kicklighter D. W.,
McGuire A. D.,
Prinn R. G.,
Wang C.,
Stone P. H.,
Sokolov A.
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 - 10.1029/98gb01035
Subject(s) - biosphere , biome , environmental science , terrestrial ecosystem , primary production , ecosystem , climate change , atmospheric sciences , global change , representative concentration pathways , tropics , latitude , global warming , biosphere model , boreal , carbon cycle , climatology , boreal ecosystem , northern hemisphere , climate model , ecology , geography , biology , geology , geodesy
In this sensitivity study, we have applied the Terrestrial Ecosystem Model ((TEM) version 4.1) to examine the responses of terrestrial ecosystems to transient changes in atmospheric CO 2 concentration and climate in the 21st century at the scales of the globe, biomes, latitudinal gradient, and economic regions. Three predictions of transient change in climate and atmospheric CO 2 concentration in the 21st century from the Integrated Global System Model developed at Massachusetts Institute of Technology were used. The TEM estimates a global annual net ecosystem production (NEP) of about 0.8 Pg C yr −1 in 1990. Global annual NEP in 2100 increases by about 2.6 Pg C yr −1 for the HHL (higher CO 2 emissions and temperature increases), 1.8 Pg C yr −1 for the RRR (reference CO 2 emissions and temperature increases), and 0.5 Pg C yr −1 for the LLH (lower CO 2 emissions and temperature increases) climate change predictions. The boreal and tropical evergreen forests account for a large portion of the increased global annual NEP. Latitudinal distribution of total annual NEP along 0.5°‐resolution latitudinal bands shifts significantly from the tropics to the northern middle and high latitudes over time. The potential CO 2 uptake over the period of 1990–2100 differs substantially among the 12 economic regions of the world. As we used potential mature natural vegetation in the global extrapolation of TEM, these NEP estimates represent the potential CO 2 uptake or the upper bound for long‐term carbon sequestration by the terrestrial biosphere. This sensitivity study shows that the temporal dynamics and spatial distribution of carbon, nitrogen, and water fluxes of terrestrial ecosystems are very sensitive to the magnitudes and paths of transient changes in atmospheric CO 2 concentration and climate in the 21st century.