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Modelling carbon balances of coastal arctic tundra under changing climate
Author(s) -
Grant Robert F.,
Oechel Walter C.,
Ping ChienLu
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
global change biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.146
H-Index - 255
eISSN - 1365-2486
pISSN - 1354-1013
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-2486.2003.00549.x
Subject(s) - tundra , environmental science , arctic , ecosystem , ecosystem respiration , atmospheric sciences , sink (geography) , carbon dioxide , climate change , soil carbon , saturation (graph theory) , primary production , climatology , ecology , soil water , soil science , geography , biology , geology , cartography , mathematics , combinatorics
Rising air temperatures are believed to be hastening heterotrophic respiration (R h ) in arctic tundra ecosystems, which could lead to substantial losses of soil carbon (C). In order to improve confidence in predicting the likelihood of such loss, the comprehensive ecosystem model ecosys was first tested with carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) fluxes measured over a tundra soil in a growth chamber under various temperatures and soil‐water contents (θ). The model was then tested with CO 2 and energy fluxes measured over a coastal arctic tundra near Barrow, Alaska, under a range of weather conditions during 1998–1999. A rise in growth chamber temperature from 7 to 15 °C caused large, but commensurate, rises in respiration and CO 2 fixation, and so no significant effect on net CO 2 exchange was modelled or measured. An increase in growth chamber θ from field capacity to saturation caused substantial reductions in respiration but not in CO 2 fixation, and so an increase in net CO 2 exchange was modelled and measured. Long daylengths over the coastal tundra at Barrow caused an almost continuous C sink to be modelled and measured during most of July (2–4 g C m −2 d −1 ), but shortening daylengths and declining air temperatures caused a C source to be modelled and measured by early September (∼1 g C m −2 d −1 ). At an annual time scale, the coastal tundra was modelled to be a small C sink (4 g C m −2 y −1 ) during 1998 when average air temperatures were 4 °C above normal, and a larger C sink (16 g C m −2 y −1 ) during 1999 when air temperatures were close to long‐term normals. During 100 years under rising atmospheric CO 2 concentration (C a ), air temperature and precipitation driven by the IS92a emissions scenario, modelled R h rose commensurately with net primary productivity (NPP) under both current and elevated rates of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition, so that changes in soil C remained small. However, methane (CH 4 ) emissions were predicted to rise substantially in coastal tundra with IS92a‐driven climate change (from ∼20 to ∼40 g C m −2 y −1 ), causing a substantial increase in the emission of CO 2 equivalents. If the rate of temperature increase hypothesized in the IS92a emissions scenario had been raised by 50%, substantial losses of soil C (∼1 kg C m −2 ) would have been modelled after 100 years, including additional emissions of CH 4 .