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Greening Hiatus in Eurasian Boreal Forests Since 1997 Caused by a Wetting and Cooling Summer Climate

Xueyuan Gao, Shunlin Liang, Jeffery Sauer

2020Journal of Geophysical Research Biogeosciences20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract The Eurasian boreal forest ecosystem is a strong sink in the global carbon cycle. Satellite observations show significant change in the ecosystem in recent decades, specifically an increase in vegetation productivity since 1982 and a hiatus after 1997. Previous studies attributed this enhanced vegetation growth (also known as greening) to air temperature increases and a longer growing season, and the recent greening hiatus as a result of a warmer and drier climate. However, using satellite data, we found observational evidence that increases in summer peak growth dominated the overall greening trend and that a wetting and cooling climate during the peak growing season was the primary cause of the hiatus.

Topics & Concepts

GreeningBorealTaigaEnvironmental scienceClimate changeVegetation (pathology)Growing seasonHiatusSink (geography)EcosystemClimatologyPhysical geographyEcologyAtmospheric sciencesGeographyForestryGeologyMedicinePathologyBiologyCartographyPaleontologyPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsTree-ring climate responsesRemote Sensing in Agriculture
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