Author/Authors :
A diagnostic carbon flux model to monitor the effects of disturbance ، نويسنده , , interannual variation in climate on regional NEP ، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Two approximations to convective transport have been implemented in an offline chemistry transport model (CTM) to
explore the impact on calculated atmosphericCO2 distributions. GlobalCO2 in the year 2000 is simulated using theCTM
driven by assimilated meteorological fields from the NASA’s Goddard Earth Observation System Data Assimilation
System, Version 4 (GEOS-4). The model simulates atmospheric CO2 by adopting the same CO2 emission inventory and
dynamical modules as described in Kawa et al. (convective transport scheme denoted as Conv1). Conv1 approximates
the convective transport by using the bulk convective mass fluxes to redistribute trace gases. The alternate approximation,
Conv2, partitions fluxes into updraft and downdraft, as well as into entrainment and detrainment, and has potential to
yield a more realistic simulation of vertical redistribution through deep convection. Replacing Conv1 by Conv2 results
in an overestimate of CO2 over biospheric sink regions. The largest discrepancies result in a CO2 difference of about
7.8 ppm in the July NH boreal forest, which is about 30% of the CO2 seasonality for that area. These differences are
compared to those produced by emission scenario variations constrained by the framework of Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC) to account for possible land use change and residual terrestrial CO2 sink. It is shown that
the overestimated CO2 driven by Conv2 can be offset by introducing these supplemental emissions.