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The Tundra Carbon Balance - some recent results with LPJ-GUESS contributions. Paul Miller Ben Smith, Martin Sykes, Torben Christensen, Arnaud Heroult, Almut Arneth, Rita Wania, Dave McGuire. Background & Outline. Why study the tundra? Relevant LPJ-GUESS developments
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The Tundra Carbon Balance- some recent results withLPJ-GUESS contributions Paul Miller Ben Smith, Martin Sykes, Torben Christensen, Arnaud Heroult, Almut Arneth, Rita Wania, Dave McGuire
Background & Outline • Why study the tundra? • Relevant LPJ-GUESS developments • Results from RECCAP (the present C balance) • Results from CARBO-North (the present and future C balance) Funding and Support from: • CARBO-North (EU-FP6) funded • Mistra-SWECIA • LUCCI • MERGE
Tundra Tundra Boreal Forest Callaghan et al., Ambio, 2002
Why Study the Tundra? Substantial future climate warming is expected, with consequences for: • Species diversity (which is less than temperate biomes - ACIA) • Vegetation (growing season length, productivity etc.) • Permafrost • Soil carbon
Ongoing Warming And Amplification Linear temperature trend, 1960-2009 Paleoclimatic Evidence for Arctic Amplification Serreze & Barry, 2011
More Productive Tundra Vegetation? Bhatt et al, 2010, Serreze & Barry, 2011
Carbon in NH Permafrost 1672 GtC Schuur et al. 2008 Tarnocai et al., GBC, 2009
Circumpolar & Tundra Soil Carbon Tarnocai et al., 2009
REgional Carbon Cycle Assessment and Processes • RECCAP – www.globalcarbonproject.org/reccap • Objective: To “…establish the mean carbon balance and change over the period 1990-2009” for all subcontinents and ocean basins • 14 regions in the RECCAP synthesis: 10 terrestrial, 4 ocean regions • Achieved by a sythesis of bottom-up (observations and modelling) and top-down (inverse) modeling approaches Canadell et al., EOS, 2011
RECCAP Arctic Tundra Chapter • Lead authors: Dave McGuire (Univ. Alaska), Torben Christensen (UL) • Approach: Compare estimates of C exchange in Arctic tundra from observations, process-based modelling, and atmospheric inversions, 1990-2006 McGuire, Christensen et al., submitted
LPJ-GUESS Model Development • Numerical soil temperature and soil water freezing calculations • New shrub and open ground PFTs (Wolf) • New peatland hydrology and PFTs • Methane module • Modelled vegetation, ALD, soil temperature & CO2/CH4 fluxes agree satisfactorily with site and regional observations • LPJ-GUESS WHyMe now available Wania et al., 2009,2011; Miller et al., almost submitted
LPJ-GUESS Simulations LPJ-GUESS Climate forcing WHyMe Peatland Output (m-2): Vegetation CO2 fluxes (NPP, NEE etc.) Carbon pools CH4 fluxes Upland Output (m-2): Vegetation CO2 fluxes (NPP, NEE etc.) Carbon pools Upland Peatland Tundra Gridcell
RECCAP NEE & CH4 Observations NEE Neutral! CH4 • 250 estimates from 120 published studies • From a CO2 source in the 90s to a sink in the 2000s McGuire, Christensen et al., submitted
RECCAP Observations McGuire, Christensen et al., submitted
RECCAP Process-based Models 1990-99 2000-06 • LPJ-GUESS WHyMe, Orchidee, TEM6, TCF • From a small CO2 sink in the 90s to a greater sink in the 2000s McGuire, Christensen et al., submitted
RECCAP Process-based Models- Seasonal Cycle - 1990-2006 2000-2009 2000-06 McGuire, Christensen et al., submitted • General agreement on seasonal cycle • Summer NPP is higher in the 2000s
RECCAP Process-based Models- Interannual Variability- McGuire, Christensen et al., submitted • GPP; NPP & Rh highly correlated • NEP mostly uncorrelated
RECCAP Process-based Models- Fire & CH4 Interannual Variability- McGuire, Christensen et al., submitted
NEE From Inverse Models • Similar shape of mean seasonal cycle • Qualitative agreement with process models’ NEP McGuire, Christensen et al., submitted
Arctic Tundra C Balance McGuire, Christensen et al., submitted
CARBO-North Domain CARBO-North study region T. Virtanen et al. 2004
Climate Projections Mean Annual Temperature Annual Precipitation Warmer and wetter at all sites (A1B)
Seida – Tundra Bog • Chamber and EC flux measurements of CO2, CH4 & N2O Photo: M. Repo
Seida – Tundra Fen • Chamber and EC flux measurements of CO2, CH4 & N2O Photo: M. Repo
Data: M. Johansson Abisko Birch Soil Temperature- Local Soil Properties -
Wetland Hydrology • Granberg et al. (1999) Mixed Mire Water and Heat Model (MMWH) – hydrology part only • Soil column divided into acrotelm and catotelm • Daily precip., snowmelt, evapotranspiration, run-off & run-on determine water profile • Plants are never water stressed • Can use empirical EVP too • 10cm standing water allowed
Abisko (Torneträsk) Active Layer Data: M. Johansson & J. Åkerman
Modern Thaw Depths 1961-1990, LPJ-GUESS metre Miller et al., unpublished Tarnocai et al., GBC, 2009
Treeline kgC/m2 Tarnocai et al., GBC, 2009
Shrub & Open Ground PFTs Wolf et al. Clim. Ch. (2008)