Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2025

Presentation information

[E] Oral

M (Multidisciplinary and Interdisciplinary) » M-IS Intersection

[M-IS05] Environmental, Socio-economic, and Climatic Changes in Northern Eurasia

Sun. May 25, 2025 9:00 AM - 10:30 AM Exhibition Hall Special Setting (6) (Exhibition Hall 7&8, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Pavel Groisman(NC State University Research Scholar at NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information, Asheville, North Carolina, USA), Shamil Maksyutov(National Institute for Environmental Studies), Alexander Olchev(Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia), Chairperson:Pavel Groisman(NC State University Research Scholar at NOAA National Centers for Environmental Information, Asheville, North Carolina, USA), Shamil Maksyutov(National Institute for Environmental Studies), Iuliia Mukhartova(Lomonosov Moscow State University)

9:30 AM - 9:45 AM

[MIS05-03] CARBON POOLS AND FLUXES IN ECOSYSTEMS OF THE WESTERN SIBERIA: RESULTS OF THE FIRST STAGE OF THE PROJECT "RUSSIAN CLIMATE MONITORING SYSTEM"

*Evgeniya Golovatskaya1, Egor Dyukarev1, Elena Veretennikova1, Sergey Kopysov1, Yuliya Preis1, Evgeniy Gordov1 (1.IMCES SB RAS)

Keywords:CARBON BALANCE , CLIMATE MODELLING, CLIMATE SYSTEM, ECOSYSTEM RESPONSE, BIG DATA, FOREST AND WET ECOSYSTEMS, CLIMATE MODELLING, ECOSYSTEM RESPONSE

Carbon exchange between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere is one of the main natural processes, the need for quantitative assessment of which is due to the terms of the Framework Convention on Climate Change, the Kyoto Protocol and post-Kyoto climate agreements.
The results of a study of carbon stocks and fluxes in forest and peatlands of the southern taiga of Western Siberia are presented based on world-class standardized infrastructure. Creation of a conceptual and software basis for the development of a prototype of a distributed information and analytical system for collecting, storing, processing and analyzing data from monitoring carbon pools and greenhouse gas fluxes in terrestrial ecosystems of the southern taiga subzone of Western Siberia. A prototype of a "digital twin" of wetland ecosystems has been developed as an independent software component that interacts with various relational observation databases and provides unified access to both the data itself and the results of its preliminary processing and visualization.
The research was carried out as part of the key innovative project of national importance "Russian Climate Monitoring System"