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Patterns and controls of inter-annual variability in the terrestrial carbon budget

MPG-Autoren
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Rödenbeck,  Christian
Inverse Data-driven Estimation, Dr. C. Rödenbeck, Department Biogeochemical Systems, Prof. M. Heimann, Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Max Planck Society;

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Marcolla, B., Rödenbeck, C., & Cescatti, A. (2017). Patterns and controls of inter-annual variability in the terrestrial carbon budget. Biogeosciences, 14(16), 3815-3829. doi:10.5194/bg-14-3815-2017.


Zitierlink: https://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-002C-43CE-2
Zusammenfassung
The terrestrial carbon fluxes show the largest variability among the components of the global carbon cycle and drive most of the temporal variations in the growth rate of atmospheric CO2 (Le Quéré 2014). Understanding the environmental controls and trends of the terrestrial carbon budget is therefore essential to predict the future trajectories of the CO2 airborne fraction and atmospheric concentrations. In the present work, patterns and controls of the inter-annual variability (IAV) of carbon Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE) have been analysed using three different data-streams: ecosystem level observations from the FLUXNET database (La Thuille and 2015 releases), the MPI-MTE bottom-up product resulting from the global up-scaling of site-level fluxes, and the Jena CarboScope Inversion, a top-down estimate of surface fluxes obtained from observed CO2 concentrations and an atmospheric transport model. Consistencies and discrepancies in the temporal and spatial patterns and in the climatic and physiological controls of IAV were investigated between the three data sources. The global average of IAV at FLUXNET sites (~ 120 gC m−2 y−1), quantified as the standard deviation of annual NEE, was observed to peak in arid ecosystems and to be almost six times larger than the values calculated from the two global products (15 and 20 gC m−2 y−1 for MPI-MTE and Jena inversion, respectively). The two data-driven global products show that most of the temporal variability observed in the last three decades is due to yearly anomalies, whereas the temporal trends explain only about 15 % of the variability in the MPI-MTE product and 20 % in the Jena Inversion product. Both at site level and at global scale, the IAV of NEE is driven by the gross primary productivity and in particular by the cumulative carbon flux during the months when land acts as a sink. Altogether these results offer a broad view on the magnitude, spatial patterns and environmental drivers of IAV from a variety of data sources, that can be instrumental to improve our understanding of the terrestrial carbon budget and to validate the predictions of land surface models.