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Carbon-nitrogen feedbacks in the UVic ESCM
oleh: R. Wania, K. J. Meissner, M. Eby, V. K. Arora, I. Ross, A. J. Weaver
| Format: | Article |
|---|---|
| Diterbitkan: | Copernicus Publications 2012-09-01 |
Deskripsi
A representation of the terrestrial nitrogen cycle is introduced into the UVic Earth System Climate Model (UVic ESCM). The UVic ESCM now contains five terrestrial carbon pools and seven terrestrial nitrogen pools: soil, litter, leaves, stem and roots for both elements and ammonium and nitrate in the soil for nitrogen. Nitrogen cycles through plant tissue, litter, soil and the mineral pools before being taken up again by the plant. Biological N<sub>2</sub> fixation and nitrogen deposition represent external inputs to the plant-soil system while losses occur via leaching. Simulated carbon and nitrogen pools and fluxes are in the range of other models and observations. Gross primary production (GPP) for the 1990s in the CN-coupled version is 129.6 Pg C a<sup>−1</sup> and net C uptake is 0.83 Pg C a<sup>−1</sup>, whereas the C-only version results in a GPP of 133.1 Pg C a<sup>−1</sup> and a net C uptake of 1.57 Pg C a<sup>−1</sup>. At the end of a transient experiment for the years 1800–1999, where radiative forcing is held constant but CO<sub>2</sub> fertilisation for vegetation is permitted to occur, the CN-coupled version shows an enhanced net C uptake of 1.05 Pg C a<sup>−1</sup>, whereas in the experiment where CO<sub>2</sub> is held constant and temperature is transient the land turns into a C source of 0.60 Pg C a<sup>−1</sup> by the 1990s. The arithmetic sum of the temperature and CO<sub>2</sub> effects is 0.45 Pg C a<sup>−1</sup>, 0.38 Pg C a<sup>−1</sup> lower than seen in the fully forced model, suggesting a strong nonlinearity in the CN-coupled version. Anthropogenic N deposition has a positive effect on Net Ecosystem Production of 0.35 Pg C a<sup>−1</sup>. Overall, the UVic CN-coupled version shows similar characteristics to other CN-coupled Earth System Models, as measured by net C balance and sensitivity to changes in climate, CO<sub>2</sub> and temperature.