Field-experiment constraints on the enhancement of the terrestrial carbon sink by CO2 fertilization
Yongwen Liu, Shilong Piao, Thomas Gasser, Philippe Ciais, Hui Yang, Han Wang, Trevor F. Keenan, Mengtian Huang, Shiqiang Wan, Jian Song, Kai Wang, Ivan A. Janssens, Josep Peñuelas, Chris Huntingford, Xuhui Wang, M. Altaf Arain, Yuanyuan Fang, Joshua B. Fisher, Maoyi Huang, D. N. Huntzinger, Akihiko Ito, Atul K. Jain, Jiafu Mao, A. M. Michalak, Changhui Peng, Benjamin Poulter, Christopher R. Schwalm, Xiaoying Shi, Hanqin Tian, Yaxing Wei, Ning Zeng, Qiuan Zhu, Tao Wang
Abstract
Clarifying how increased atmospheric CO2 concentration (eCO2) contributes to accelerated land carbon sequestration remains important since this process is the largest negative feedback in the coupled carbon–climate system. Here, we constrain the sensitivity of the terrestrial carbon sink to eCO2 over the temperate Northern Hemisphere for the past five decades, using 12 terrestrial ecosystem models and data from seven CO2 enrichment experiments. This constraint uses the heuristic finding that the northern temperate carbon sink sensitivity to eCO2 is linearly related to the site-scale sensitivity across the models. The emerging data-constrained eCO2 sensitivity is 0.64 ± 0.28 PgC yr−1 per hundred ppm of eCO2. Extrapolating worldwide, this northern temperate sensitivity projects the global terrestrial carbon sink to increase by 3.5 ± 1.9 PgC yr−1 for an increase in CO2 of 100 ppm. This value suggests that CO2 fertilization alone explains most of the observed increase in global land carbon sink since the 1960s. More CO2 enrichment experiments, particularly in boreal, arctic and tropical ecosystems, are required to explain further the responsible processes. The northern temperate carbon sink is estimated to increase by 0.64 PgC each year for each increase in atmospheric CO2 concentrations by 100 ppm, suggests an analysis of data from field experiments at 7 sites constraints.- Cite:
- Yongwen Liu, Shilong Piao, Thomas Gasser, Philippe Ciais, Hui Yang, Han Wang, Trevor F. Keenan, Mengtian Huang, Shiqiang Wan, Jian Song, Kai Wang, Ivan A. Janssens, Josep Peñuelas, Chris Huntingford, Xuhui Wang, M. Altaf Arain, Yuanyuan Fang, Joshua B. Fisher, Maoyi Huang, et al.. 2019. Field-experiment constraints on the enhancement of the terrestrial carbon sink by CO2 fertilization. Nature Geoscience, Volume 12, Issue 10, 12(10):809–814.
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@article{Liu-2019-Field-experiment, title = "Field-experiment constraints on the enhancement of the terrestrial carbon sink by CO2 fertilization", author = "Liu, Yongwen and Piao, Shilong and Gasser, Thomas and Ciais, Philippe and Yang, Hui and Wang, Han and Keenan, Trevor F. and Huang, Mengtian and Wan, Shiqiang and Song, Jian and Wang, Kai and Janssens, Ivan A. and Pe{\~n}uelas, Josep and Huntingford, Chris and Wang, Xuhui and Arain, M. Altaf and Fang, Yuanyuan and Fisher, Joshua B. and Huang, Maoyi and Huntzinger, D. N. and Ito, Akihiko and Jain, Atul K. and Mao, Jiafu and Michalak, A. M. and Peng, Changhui and Poulter, Benjamin and Schwalm, Christopher R. and Shi, Xiaoying and Tian, Hanqin and Wei, Yaxing and Zeng, Ning and Zhu, Qiuan and Wang, Tao", journal = "Nature Geoscience, Volume 12, Issue 10", volume = "12", number = "10", year = "2019", publisher = "Springer Science and Business Media LLC", url = "https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G19-99001", doi = "10.1038/s41561-019-0436-1", pages = "809--814", abstract = "Clarifying how increased atmospheric CO2 concentration (eCO2) contributes to accelerated land carbon sequestration remains important since this process is the largest negative feedback in the coupled carbon{--}climate system. Here, we constrain the sensitivity of the terrestrial carbon sink to eCO2 over the temperate Northern Hemisphere for the past five decades, using 12 terrestrial ecosystem models and data from seven CO2 enrichment experiments. This constraint uses the heuristic finding that the northern temperate carbon sink sensitivity to eCO2 is linearly related to the site-scale sensitivity across the models. The emerging data-constrained eCO2 sensitivity is 0.64 {\mbox{$\pm$}} 0.28 PgC yr−1 per hundred ppm of eCO2. Extrapolating worldwide, this northern temperate sensitivity projects the global terrestrial carbon sink to increase by 3.5 {\mbox{$\pm$}} 1.9 PgC yr−1 for an increase in CO2 of 100 ppm. This value suggests that CO2 fertilization alone explains most of the observed increase in global land carbon sink since the 1960s. More CO2 enrichment experiments, particularly in boreal, arctic and tropical ecosystems, are required to explain further the responsible processes. The northern temperate carbon sink is estimated to increase by 0.64 PgC each year for each increase in atmospheric CO2 concentrations by 100 ppm, suggests an analysis of data from field experiments at 7 sites constraints.", }
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Here, we constrain the sensitivity of the terrestrial carbon sink to eCO2 over the temperate Northern Hemisphere for the past five decades, using 12 terrestrial ecosystem models and data from seven CO2 enrichment experiments. This constraint uses the heuristic finding that the northern temperate carbon sink sensitivity to eCO2 is linearly related to the site-scale sensitivity across the models. The emerging data-constrained eCO2 sensitivity is 0.64 \pm 0.28 PgC yr−1 per hundred ppm of eCO2. Extrapolating worldwide, this northern temperate sensitivity projects the global terrestrial carbon sink to increase by 3.5 \pm 1.9 PgC yr−1 for an increase in CO2 of 100 ppm. This value suggests that CO2 fertilization alone explains most of the observed increase in global land carbon sink since the 1960s. More CO2 enrichment experiments, particularly in boreal, arctic and tropical ecosystems, are required to explain further the responsible processes. 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%0 Journal Article %T Field-experiment constraints on the enhancement of the terrestrial carbon sink by CO2 fertilization %A Liu, Yongwen %A Piao, Shilong %A Gasser, Thomas %A Ciais, Philippe %A Yang, Hui %A Wang, Han %A Keenan, Trevor F. %A Huang, Mengtian %A Wan, Shiqiang %A Song, Jian %A Wang, Kai %A Janssens, Ivan A. %A Peñuelas, Josep %A Huntingford, Chris %A Wang, Xuhui %A Arain, M. Altaf %A Fang, Yuanyuan %A Fisher, Joshua B. %A Huang, Maoyi %A Huntzinger, D. N. %A Ito, Akihiko %A Jain, Atul K. %A Mao, Jiafu %A Michalak, A. M. %A Peng, Changhui %A Poulter, Benjamin %A Schwalm, Christopher R. %A Shi, Xiaoying %A Tian, Hanqin %A Wei, Yaxing %A Zeng, Ning %A Zhu, Qiuan %A Wang, Tao %J Nature Geoscience, Volume 12, Issue 10 %D 2019 %V 12 %N 10 %I Springer Science and Business Media LLC %F Liu-2019-Field-experiment %X Clarifying how increased atmospheric CO2 concentration (eCO2) contributes to accelerated land carbon sequestration remains important since this process is the largest negative feedback in the coupled carbon–climate system. Here, we constrain the sensitivity of the terrestrial carbon sink to eCO2 over the temperate Northern Hemisphere for the past five decades, using 12 terrestrial ecosystem models and data from seven CO2 enrichment experiments. This constraint uses the heuristic finding that the northern temperate carbon sink sensitivity to eCO2 is linearly related to the site-scale sensitivity across the models. The emerging data-constrained eCO2 sensitivity is 0.64 \pm 0.28 PgC yr−1 per hundred ppm of eCO2. Extrapolating worldwide, this northern temperate sensitivity projects the global terrestrial carbon sink to increase by 3.5 \pm 1.9 PgC yr−1 for an increase in CO2 of 100 ppm. This value suggests that CO2 fertilization alone explains most of the observed increase in global land carbon sink since the 1960s. More CO2 enrichment experiments, particularly in boreal, arctic and tropical ecosystems, are required to explain further the responsible processes. The northern temperate carbon sink is estimated to increase by 0.64 PgC each year for each increase in atmospheric CO2 concentrations by 100 ppm, suggests an analysis of data from field experiments at 7 sites constraints. %R 10.1038/s41561-019-0436-1 %U https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G19-99001 %U https://doi.org/10.1038/s41561-019-0436-1 %P 809-814
Markdown (Informal)
[Field-experiment constraints on the enhancement of the terrestrial carbon sink by CO2 fertilization](https://gwf-uwaterloo.github.io/gwf-publications/G19-99001) (Liu et al., GWF 2019)
- Field-experiment constraints on the enhancement of the terrestrial carbon sink by CO2 fertilization (Liu et al., GWF 2019)
ACL
- Yongwen Liu, Shilong Piao, Thomas Gasser, Philippe Ciais, Hui Yang, Han Wang, Trevor F. Keenan, Mengtian Huang, Shiqiang Wan, Jian Song, Kai Wang, Ivan A. Janssens, Josep Peñuelas, Chris Huntingford, Xuhui Wang, M. Altaf Arain, Yuanyuan Fang, Joshua B. Fisher, Maoyi Huang, et al.. 2019. Field-experiment constraints on the enhancement of the terrestrial carbon sink by CO2 fertilization. Nature Geoscience, Volume 12, Issue 10, 12(10):809–814.