Title of article :
The surface energy, water, carbon flux and their intercorrelated seasonality in a global climate-vegetation coupled model
Author/Authors :
By LI DAN ، نويسنده , , JINJUN JI، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The sensible and latent heat fluxes, representatives of the physical exchange processes of energy and water between land
and air, are the two crucial variables controlling the surface energy partitioning related to temperature and humidity. The
net primary production (NPP), the major carbon flux exchange between vegetation and atmosphere, is of great importance
for the terrestrial ecosystem carbon cycle. The fluxes are simulated by a two-way coupled model, Atmosphere-Vegetation
Interaction Model-Global Ocean-Atmosphere-Land System Model (AVIM-GOALS) in which the surface physical and
physiological processes are coupled with general circulation model (GCM), and the global spatial and temporal variation
of the fluxes is studied. The simulated terrestrial surface physical fluxes are consistent with the 40-yr European Centre
for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) Reanalysis (ERA40) in the global distribution, but the magnitudes
are generally 20–40 W/m2 underestimated. The annual NPP agrees well with the International Geosphere Biosphere
Programme (IGBP) NPP data except for the lower value in northern high latitudes. The surface physical fluxes, leaf
area index (LAI) and NPP of the global mid-latitudes, especially between 30 ◦N–50 ◦N, show great variation in annual
oscillation amplitudes. And all physical and biological fields in northern mid-latitudes have the largest seasonality with a
high statistical significance of 99.9%. The seasonality of surface physical fluxes, LAI and NPP are highly correlated with
each other. The meridional three-peak pattern of seasonal change emerges in northern mid-latitudes, which indicates
the interaction of topographical gradient variation of surface fluxes and vegetation phenology on these three latitudinal
belts.