JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2020

講演情報

[E] 口頭発表

セッション記号 A (大気水圏科学) » A-CG 大気海洋・環境科学複合領域・一般

[A-CG52] Large Ensemble Modeling Approaches as Tools for Climate and Impacts Research

コンビーナ:Rodgers Keith Bradley(IBS Center for Climate Physics)、見延 庄士郎(北海道大学大学院理学研究院)、塩竈 秀夫(国立環境研究所地球環境研究センター)、水田 亮(気象庁気象研究所)

[ACG52-03] Changes in global terrestrial ecosystem respiration with future warming: a probabilistic approach

*Irina Melnikova1Takahiro Sasai1 (1.Tohoku University)

キーワード:d4PDF, biosphere model, TER

The atmospheric increase in CO2 concentration and consequent climate change rendered the terrestrial biosphere as an increasing carbon sink. Although several studies have warned that the land sink may slow down or reverse in a future warmer world, no study projected the future changes in the carbon fluxes by using statistical methods. Here we combined a biosphere model BEAMS and a large-ensemble warming climate simulations of d4PDF data set in order to investigate the changes in the frequency distributions of global terrestrial ecosystem respiration (TER) in 1960–2010 and future +2K and +4K warmer than pre-industrial climate simulations. This is a pioneer study that performs a probabilistic approach to analyze the future changes in TER. The biosphere model outputs indicate that both magnitude and interannual variability of TER increase with climate warming, with larger relative increase in the high latitudes. The increase in TER variability exhibits bipolarity and corresponds to higher TER in the tropics and northern high latitudes. The TER increase in the present climate is attributed to the CO2 fertilization effect-driven increase in plant biomass. However, in future +2K and +4K climates, temperature contribution to the anthropogenic TER effect is projected to increase exponentially according to Q10 function. The disproportional increase in TER with warming towards high latitudes that are a massive reservoir of soil carbon highlight the need in the urgent action for stronger mitigation policies. The estimation of unaccounted land carbon fluxes, e.g. permafrost thawing and subsequent decomposition of organic matter, fires, etc. would further contrite to deepening the understanding of the impact of anthropogenic activities on the terrestrial carbon fluxes.