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Process-oriented analysis of dominant sources of uncertainty in the land carbon sink.

Michael O'SullivanPierre FriedlingsteinStephen SitchPeter AnthoniAlmut ArnethVivek K AroraVladislav BastrikovChristine DelireDaniel S GollAtul K JainEtsushi KatoDaniel KennedyJürgen KnauerSebastian LienertDanica L LombardozziPatrick C McGuireJoe R MeltonJulia E M S NabelJulia PongratzBenjamin PoulterRoland SéférianHanqin TianNicolas VuichardAnthony P WalkerWenping YuanXu YueSönke Zaehle
Published in: Nature communications (2022)
The observed global net land carbon sink is captured by current land models. All models agree that atmospheric CO 2 and nitrogen deposition driven gains in carbon stocks are partially offset by climate and land-use and land-cover change (LULCC) losses. However, there is a lack of consensus in the partitioning of the sink between vegetation and soil, where models do not even agree on the direction of change in carbon stocks over the past 60 years. This uncertainty is driven by plant productivity, allocation, and turnover response to atmospheric CO 2 (and to a smaller extent to LULCC), and the response of soil to LULCC (and to a lesser extent climate). Overall, differences in turnover explain ~70% of model spread in both vegetation and soil carbon changes. Further analysis of internal plant and soil (individual pools) cycling is needed to reduce uncertainty in the controlling processes behind the global land carbon sink.
Keyphrases
  • climate change
  • plant growth
  • water quality
  • particulate matter
  • bone mineral density
  • air pollution
  • drinking water
  • amino acid