Two sub-annual timescales and coupling modes for terrestrial water and carbon cycles

被引:0
|
作者
Gianotti, Daniel J. Short [1 ]
McColl, Kaighin A. [2 ,3 ]
Feldman, Andrew F. [4 ,5 ]
Xu, Xiangtao [6 ]
Entekhabi, Dara [1 ]
机构
[1] MIT, Ralph M Parsons Lab Environm Sci & Engn, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[2] Harvard Univ, Dept Earth & Planetary Sci, Cambridge, MA USA
[3] Harvard Univ, John A Paulson Sch Engn & Appl Sci, Cambridge, MA USA
[4] NASA, Biospher Sci Lab, Goddard Space Flight Ctr, Greenbelt, MD USA
[5] Univ Maryland, Earth Syst Sci Interdisciplinary Ctr, Greenbelt, MD USA
[6] Cornell Univ, Dept Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Ithaca, NY USA
关键词
attractor; carbon cycle; coupled; earth system model; emergent pattern; evaporation; feedbacks; flux tower; primary productivity; water cycle; USE EFFICIENCY; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SOIL; VEGETATION; CO2; ATMOSPHERE; BALANCE; FOREST; LEAF; PHOTOSYNTHESIS;
D O I
10.1111/gcb.17463
中图分类号
X176 [生物多样性保护];
学科分类号
090705 ;
摘要
To bridge the knowledge gap between (a) our (instantaneous-to-seasonal-scale) process understanding of plants and water and (b) our projections of long-term coupled feedbacks between the terrestrial water and carbon cycles, we must uncover what the dominant dynamics are linking fluxes of water and carbon. This study uses the simplest empirical dynamical systems models-two-dimensional linear models-and observation-based data from satellites, eddy covariance towers, weather stations, and machine-learning-derived products to determine the dominant sub-annual timescales coupling carbon uptake and (normalized) evaporation fluxes. We find two dominant modes across the Contiguous United States: (1) a negative correlation timescale on the order of a few days during which landscapes dry after precipitation and plants increase their carbon uptake through photosynthetic upregulation. (2) A slow, seasonal-scale positive covariation through which landscape drying leads to decreased growth and carbon uptake. The slow (positively correlated) process dominates the joint distribution of local water and carbon variables, leading to similar behaviors across space, biomes, and climate regions. We propose that vegetation cover/leaf area variables link this behavior across space, leading to strong emergent spatial patterns of water/carbon coupling in the mean. The spatial pattern of local temporal dynamics-positively sloped tangent lines to a convex long-term mean-state curve-is surprisingly strong, and can serve as a benchmark for coupled Earth System Models. We show that many such models do not represent this emergent mean-state pattern, and hypothesize that this may be due to lack of water-carbon feedbacks at daily scales. Ecosystems respond to precipitation by taking up water and increasing photosynthesis for a period of a few days, and then begin to reduce photosynthesis until the following rain event. The rate at which they reduce carbon uptake as they dry follows a general pattern across the United States and leads to a pattern in the mean bioclimate states across ecosystems. Many recent Earth System Models fail to recreate these patterns, and we hypothesize that this could lead to mechanistic errors in our estimates of vegetation responses to changing climate conditions.image
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页数:18
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