Title of article :
Role of land cover changes for atmospheric CO2 increase and climate change during the last 150 years
Author/Authors :
Bauer، Eva نويسنده , , Brovkin، Victor نويسنده , , Sitch، Stephen نويسنده , , Bloh، Werner von نويسنده , , Claussen، Martin نويسنده , , Cramer، Wolfgang نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
We assess the role of changing natural (volcanic, aerosol, insolation) and anthropogenic (CO2 emissions, land cover) forcings on the global climate system over the last 150 years using an earth system model of intermediate complexity, CLIMBER-2. We apply several datasets of historical land-use reconstructions: the cropland dataset by Ramankutty & Foley (1999) (R&F), the HYDE land cover dataset of Klein Goldewijk (2001), and the land-use emissions data from Houghton & Hackler (2002). Comparison between the simulated and observed temporal evolution of atmospheric CO2 and (delta)^13CO2 are used to evaluate these datasets. To check model uncertainty, CLIMBER-2 was coupled to the more complex Lund–Potsdam–Jena (LPJ) dynamic global vegetation model. In simulation with R&F dataset, biogeophysical mechanisms due to land cover changes tend to decrease global air temperature by 0.26°C, while biogeochemical mechanisms act to warm the climate by 0.18°C. The net effect on climate is negligible on a global scale, but pronounced over the land in the temperate and high northern latitudes where a cooling due to an increase in land surface albedo offsets the warming due to land-use CO2 emissions. Land cover changes led to estimated increases in atmospheric CO2 of between 22 and 43 ppmv. Over the entire period 1800–2000, simulated (delta)^13CO2 with HYDE compares most favourably with ice core during 1850–1950 and Cape Grim data, indicating preference of earlier land clearance in HYDE over R&F. In relative terms, land cover forcing corresponds to 25–49% of the observed growth in atmospheric CO2. This contribution declined from 36–60% during 1850–1960 to 4–35% during 1960– 2000. CLIMBER-2-LPJ simulates the land cover contribution to atmospheric CO2 growth to decrease from 68% during 1900–1960 to 12% in the 1980s. Overall, our simulations show a decline in the relative role of land cover changes for atmospheric CO2 increase during the last 150 years.
Keywords :
atmospheric CO2 concentration , biosphere–atmosphere interaction , earth system modelling , interactive carbon cycle , biogeophysical effects , historical land cover changes , atmospheric (delta)^13CO2
Journal title :
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Journal title :
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY