The contribution of land-use change versus climate variability to the 1940s CO2 plateau: Former Soviet Union as a test case

According to the ice-core record, atmospheric CO 2 growth rate ( plateau ) stalled during the 1940s, in spite of maintained anthropogenic emissions from fossil fuel burning and land-use change. Bastos et al. (2016) have shown that the state-of-the-art reconstructions of CO 2 sources and sinks do not...

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Main Authors: Bastos, Ana, Peregon, Anna, Gani, Érico A., Khudyaev, Sergey, Yue, Chao, Li, Wei, Gouveia, Célia, Ciais, Philippe
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-2017-267
https://www.biogeosciences-discuss.net/bg-2017-267/
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spelling ftcopernicus:oai:publications.copernicus.org:bgd59942 2023-05-15T16:39:30+02:00 The contribution of land-use change versus climate variability to the 1940s CO2 plateau: Former Soviet Union as a test case Bastos, Ana Peregon, Anna Gani, Érico A. Khudyaev, Sergey Yue, Chao Li, Wei Gouveia, Célia Ciais, Philippe 2018-09-26 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-2017-267 https://www.biogeosciences-discuss.net/bg-2017-267/ eng eng doi:10.5194/bg-2017-267 https://www.biogeosciences-discuss.net/bg-2017-267/ eISSN: 1726-4189 Text 2018 ftcopernicus https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-2017-267 2019-12-24T09:51:18Z According to the ice-core record, atmospheric CO 2 growth rate ( plateau ) stalled during the 1940s, in spite of maintained anthropogenic emissions from fossil fuel burning and land-use change. Bastos et al. (2016) have shown that the state-of-the-art reconstructions of CO 2 sources and sinks do not allow closing the global CO 2 budget during this period. Their study indicates that even considering an enhancement of the ocean sink, still a gap sink of 0.4–1.5 PgC.yr −1 in terrestrial ecosystems is needed to explain the CO 2 stabilization. They hypothesised that (i) the major socioeconomic and demographic disruptions during World War II (WWII) may have led to massive land-abandonment, resulting in an additional sink from regrowing natural vegetation which is not accounted for in most reconstructions and/or (ii) the warming registered at the same time, especially in the high-latitudes, might have led to increased vegetation growth and an enhancement of the natural sink. Here, we test the different contributions of these two factors in the Former Soviet Union (FSU), motivated by several reasons. On the one hand, the territory of the FSU encompasses 15 % of the terrestrial surface, 20 % of the global soil organic carbon pool and is responsible for a considerable fraction of the present-day terrestrial CO 2 sink. On the other hand, heavy economic and demographic losses have been registered in FSU during WWII, together with likely decrease in farmland due to occupation, destruction of infrastructure and shortages of manpower. Here we present a newly compiled dataset of annual agricultural area in FSU, which better matches other socioeconomic indicators and reports a decrease in cropland of ca. 62 Mha between 1940–1943. We use an updated version of the land-surface model ORCHIDEE, ORCHIDEE-MICT, which is specifically developed to better represent high-latitude processes to simulate the carbon fluxes in terrestrial ecosystems over the 20th century. Using our new cropland dataset, we test the different contributions of the land-use change and the decadal warming reported in the 1940s to explain the plateau . As reference, we compare our results with the gap sink estimated by the group of land-surface models in Bastos et al. (2016): 0.7 PgC/yr. We find that the massive cropland decrease between 1940–1943, even if short-termed, could result in an additional decadal sink of 0.04–0.07 PgC/yr, i.e. 6–10 % of the gap sink required to explain the plateau . The ORCHIDEE-MICT simulations also indicate a very strong enhancement of the terrestrial sink by 0.4 PgC/yr, explaining about 60 % of the gap sink from the TRENDYv4 models. This enhancement is mainly explained by tree-growth in high-latitudes coincident with strongest warming sustained over the 1940–1949 decade, which is not captured by any of the other land-surface models. Even if land-abandonment during WWII might contribute to a relatively small fraction of the sink required to explain the plateau , it is still non-negligible, especially since such events have likely been registered in other regions. The vegetation growth in high-latitudes simulated by ORCHIDEE-MICT and absent in other models appears to be supported by tree-ring records, highlighting the relevance of improving the representation of high-latitude hydrological and soil processes in order to better capture decadal variability in the terrestrial CO 2 sink. Text ice core Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
institution Open Polar
collection Copernicus Publications: E-Journals
op_collection_id ftcopernicus
language English
description According to the ice-core record, atmospheric CO 2 growth rate ( plateau ) stalled during the 1940s, in spite of maintained anthropogenic emissions from fossil fuel burning and land-use change. Bastos et al. (2016) have shown that the state-of-the-art reconstructions of CO 2 sources and sinks do not allow closing the global CO 2 budget during this period. Their study indicates that even considering an enhancement of the ocean sink, still a gap sink of 0.4–1.5 PgC.yr −1 in terrestrial ecosystems is needed to explain the CO 2 stabilization. They hypothesised that (i) the major socioeconomic and demographic disruptions during World War II (WWII) may have led to massive land-abandonment, resulting in an additional sink from regrowing natural vegetation which is not accounted for in most reconstructions and/or (ii) the warming registered at the same time, especially in the high-latitudes, might have led to increased vegetation growth and an enhancement of the natural sink. Here, we test the different contributions of these two factors in the Former Soviet Union (FSU), motivated by several reasons. On the one hand, the territory of the FSU encompasses 15 % of the terrestrial surface, 20 % of the global soil organic carbon pool and is responsible for a considerable fraction of the present-day terrestrial CO 2 sink. On the other hand, heavy economic and demographic losses have been registered in FSU during WWII, together with likely decrease in farmland due to occupation, destruction of infrastructure and shortages of manpower. Here we present a newly compiled dataset of annual agricultural area in FSU, which better matches other socioeconomic indicators and reports a decrease in cropland of ca. 62 Mha between 1940–1943. We use an updated version of the land-surface model ORCHIDEE, ORCHIDEE-MICT, which is specifically developed to better represent high-latitude processes to simulate the carbon fluxes in terrestrial ecosystems over the 20th century. Using our new cropland dataset, we test the different contributions of the land-use change and the decadal warming reported in the 1940s to explain the plateau . As reference, we compare our results with the gap sink estimated by the group of land-surface models in Bastos et al. (2016): 0.7 PgC/yr. We find that the massive cropland decrease between 1940–1943, even if short-termed, could result in an additional decadal sink of 0.04–0.07 PgC/yr, i.e. 6–10 % of the gap sink required to explain the plateau . The ORCHIDEE-MICT simulations also indicate a very strong enhancement of the terrestrial sink by 0.4 PgC/yr, explaining about 60 % of the gap sink from the TRENDYv4 models. This enhancement is mainly explained by tree-growth in high-latitudes coincident with strongest warming sustained over the 1940–1949 decade, which is not captured by any of the other land-surface models. Even if land-abandonment during WWII might contribute to a relatively small fraction of the sink required to explain the plateau , it is still non-negligible, especially since such events have likely been registered in other regions. The vegetation growth in high-latitudes simulated by ORCHIDEE-MICT and absent in other models appears to be supported by tree-ring records, highlighting the relevance of improving the representation of high-latitude hydrological and soil processes in order to better capture decadal variability in the terrestrial CO 2 sink.
format Text
author Bastos, Ana
Peregon, Anna
Gani, Érico A.
Khudyaev, Sergey
Yue, Chao
Li, Wei
Gouveia, Célia
Ciais, Philippe
spellingShingle Bastos, Ana
Peregon, Anna
Gani, Érico A.
Khudyaev, Sergey
Yue, Chao
Li, Wei
Gouveia, Célia
Ciais, Philippe
The contribution of land-use change versus climate variability to the 1940s CO2 plateau: Former Soviet Union as a test case
author_facet Bastos, Ana
Peregon, Anna
Gani, Érico A.
Khudyaev, Sergey
Yue, Chao
Li, Wei
Gouveia, Célia
Ciais, Philippe
author_sort Bastos, Ana
title The contribution of land-use change versus climate variability to the 1940s CO2 plateau: Former Soviet Union as a test case
title_short The contribution of land-use change versus climate variability to the 1940s CO2 plateau: Former Soviet Union as a test case
title_full The contribution of land-use change versus climate variability to the 1940s CO2 plateau: Former Soviet Union as a test case
title_fullStr The contribution of land-use change versus climate variability to the 1940s CO2 plateau: Former Soviet Union as a test case
title_full_unstemmed The contribution of land-use change versus climate variability to the 1940s CO2 plateau: Former Soviet Union as a test case
title_sort contribution of land-use change versus climate variability to the 1940s co2 plateau: former soviet union as a test case
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-2017-267
https://www.biogeosciences-discuss.net/bg-2017-267/
genre ice core
genre_facet ice core
op_source eISSN: 1726-4189
op_relation doi:10.5194/bg-2017-267
https://www.biogeosciences-discuss.net/bg-2017-267/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-2017-267
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