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Soil respiration-driven CO 2 pulses dominate Australia's flux variability.

Eva-Marie MetzSanam N VardagSourish BasuMartin JungBernhard AhrensTarek S El-MadanyStephen SitchVivek K AroraPeter R BriggsPierre FriedlingsteinDaniel S GollAtul K JainEtsushi KatoDanica L LombardozziJulia E M S NabelBenjamin PoulterRoland SéférianHanqin TianAndrew WiltshireWenping YuanXu YueSönke ZaehleNicholas M DeutscherDavid W T GriffithAndré Butz
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2023)
The Australian continent contributes substantially to the year-to-year variability of the global terrestrial carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) sink. However, the scarcity of in situ observations in remote areas prevents the deciphering of processes that force the CO 2 flux variability. In this study, by examining atmospheric CO 2 measurements from satellites in the period 2009-2018, we find recurrent end-of-dry-season CO 2 pulses over the Australian continent. These pulses largely control the year-to-year variability of Australia's CO 2 balance. They cause two to three times larger seasonal variations compared with previous top-down inversions and bottom-up estimates. The pulses occur shortly after the onset of rainfall and are driven by enhanced soil respiration preceding photosynthetic uptake in Australia's semiarid regions. The suggested continental-scale relevance of soil-rewetting processes has substantial implications for our understanding and modeling of global climate-carbon cycle feedbacks.
Keyphrases
  • carbon dioxide
  • climate change
  • mouse model
  • plant growth
  • single molecule