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Weakening warming on spring freeze–thaw cycle caused greening Earth’s third pole

Jialing Li, Chaoyang Wu, Yongguang Zhang, Josep Peñuelas, Lei Liu, Quansheng Ge

2024Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The Tibetan Plateau, recognized as Earth's third pole and among the most responsive regions to climate shifts, profoundly influences regional and even global hydrological processes. Here, we discerned a significant weakening in the influence of temperature on the initiation of surface freeze-thaw cycle (the Start of Thawing, SOT), which can be ascribed to a multitude of climatic variables, with radiation emerging as the most pivotal factor. Additionally, we showed that the diminishing impact of warming on SOT yields amplified soil moisture within the root zone. This, in turn, fosters a greening third pole with increased leaf area index and solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence. We further showed that current Earth system models failed to reproduce the linkage between weakened sensitivity and productivity under various shared socioeconomic pathways. Our findings highlight the dynamic shifts characterizing the influence of climate warming on spring freeze-thaw process and underscore the profound ecological implications of these changes in the context of future climate scenarios.

Topics & Concepts

GreeningEnvironmental scienceGlobal warmingClimate changeContext (archaeology)Atmospheric sciencesEcologySpring (device)ClimatologyPrecipitationClimate sensitivityClimate modelGeographyBiologyGeologyMeteorologyArchaeologyEngineeringMechanical engineeringClimate change and permafrostCryospheric studies and observationsClimate variability and models
Weakening warming on spring freeze–thaw cycle caused greening Earth’s third pole | Litcius