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Global biosphere primary productivity changes during the past eight glacial cycles.

Ji-Woong YangMargaux BrandonAmaelle LandaisStéphanie Duchamp-AlphonseThomas BlunierFrédéric PriéThomas Extier
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2022)
Global biosphere productivity is the largest uptake flux of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO 2 ), and it plays an important role in past and future carbon cycles. However, global estimation of biosphere productivity remains a challenge. Using the ancient air enclosed in polar ice cores, we present the first 800,000-year record of triple isotopic ratios of atmospheric oxygen, which reflects past global biosphere productivity. We observe that global biosphere productivity in the past eight glacial intervals was lower than that in the preindustrial era and that, in most cases, it starts to increase millennia before deglaciations. Both variations occur concomitantly with CO 2 changes, implying a dominant control of CO 2 on global biosphere productivity that supports a pervasive negative feedback under the glacial climate.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • carbon dioxide
  • particulate matter
  • ionic liquid
  • current status