4.6 Article

Are Terrestrial Biosphere Models Fit for Simulating the Global Land Carbon Sink?

Journal

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021MS002946

Keywords

biogeochemical cycles; processes; and modeling; biosphere; atmosphere interactions; carbon cycling

Funding

  1. CDIAC
  2. ICOS Ecosystem Thematic Center
  3. OzFlux office
  4. ChinaFlux office
  5. AsiaFlux office
  6. DOE [DE-AC05-1008 00OR22725]
  7. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [101003536]

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The purpose of this study is to evaluate the performance of terrestrial biosphere models in reproducing the processes that drive the terrestrial carbon sink. While there is reasonable agreement between model output and reference data, improvements are still needed, such as reducing biases in leaf area index and improving the representation of processes governing soil organic carbon.
The Global Carbon Project estimates that the terrestrial biosphere has absorbed about one-third of anthropogenic CO2 emissions during the 1959-2019 period. This sink-estimate is produced by an ensemble of terrestrial biosphere models and is consistent with the land uptake inferred from the residual of emissions and ocean uptake. The purpose of our study is to understand how well terrestrial biosphere models reproduce the processes that drive the terrestrial carbon sink. One challenge is to decide what level of agreement between model output and observation-based reference data is adequate considering that reference data are prone to uncertainties. To define such a level of agreement, we compute benchmark scores that quantify the similarity between independently derived reference data sets using multiple statistical metrics. Models are considered to perform well if their model scores reach benchmark scores. Our results show that reference data can differ considerably, causing benchmark scores to be low. Model scores are often of similar magnitude as benchmark scores, implying that model performance is reasonable given how different reference data are. While model performance is encouraging, ample potential for improvements remains, including a reduction in a positive leaf area index bias, improved representations of processes that govern soil organic carbon in high latitudes, and an assessment of causes that drive the inter-model spread of gross primary productivity in boreal regions and humid tropics. The success of future model development will increasingly depend on our capacity to reduce and account for observational uncertainties.

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