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Inferring CO<sub>2</sub> fertilization effect based on global monitoring land-atmosphere exchange with a theoretical model

Masahito Ueyama, Kazuhito Ichii, Hideki Kobayashi, Tomo’omi Kumagai, Jason Beringer, Lutz Merbold, E. S. Euskirchen, Takashi Hirano, Luca Belelli Marchesini, Dennis Baldocchi, Taku M. Saitoh, Yasuko Mizoguchi, Keisuke Ono, Joon Kim, Andrej Varlagin, Minseok Kang, Takanori Shimizu, Yoshiko Kosugi, M. Syndonia Bret‐Harte, Takashi Machimura, Yojiro Matsuura, Takeshi Ohta, Kentaro Takagi, Satoru Takanashi, Yukio Yasuda

2020Environmental Research Letters80 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Rising atmospheric CO 2 concentration ([CO 2 ]) enhances photosynthesis and reduces transpiration at the leaf, ecosystem, and global scale via the CO 2 fertilization effect. The CO 2 fertilization effect is among the most important processes for predicting the terrestrial carbon budget and future climate, yet it has been elusive to quantify. For evaluating the CO 2 fertilization effect on land photosynthesis and transpiration, we developed a technique that isolated this effect from other confounding effects, such as changes in climate, using a noisy time series of observed land-atmosphere CO 2 and water vapor exchange. Here, we evaluate the magnitude of this effect from 2000 to 2014 globally based on constraint optimization of gross primary productivity (GPP) and evapotranspiration in a canopy photosynthesis model over 104 global eddy-covariance stations. We found a consistent increase of GPP (0.138 ± 0.007% ppm −1 ; percentile per rising ppm of [CO 2 ]) and a concomitant decrease in transpiration (−0.073% ± 0.006% ppm −1 ) due to rising [CO 2 ]. Enhanced GPP from CO 2 fertilization after the baseline year 2000 is, on average, 1.2% of global GPP, 12.4 g C m −2 yr −1 or 1.8 Pg C yr −1 at the years from 2001 to 2014. Our result demonstrates that the current increase in [CO 2 ] could potentially explain the recent land CO 2 sink at the global scale.

Topics & Concepts

TranspirationEnvironmental scienceEvapotranspirationPrimary productionEddy covarianceAtmospheric sciencesPhotosynthesisWater vaporCarbon cycleAtmosphere (unit)Photosynthetically active radiationClimatologyEcosystemChemistryMeteorologyEcologyBotanyBiologyPhysicsOrganic chemistryGeologyAtmospheric and Environmental Gas DynamicsPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsClimate variability and models
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