4.5 Article

Remotely sensed interannual variations and trends in terestrial net primary productivity 1981-2000

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ECOSYSTEMS
卷 7, 期 3, 页码 233-242

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10021-003-0189-x

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net primary production; interannual variability; GLObal Production Efficiency Model (GLO-PEM); Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR)

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Spatial and temporal variations in net primary production (NPP) are of great importance to ecological studies, natural resource management, and terrestrial carbon sink estimates. However, most of the existing estimates of interannual variation in NPP at regional and global scales were made at coarse resolutions with climate-driven process models. In this study, we quantified global NPP variation at an 8 km and 10-day resolution from 1981 to 2000 based on satellite observations. The high resolution was achieved using the GLObal Production Efficiency Model (GLO-PEM), which was driven with variables derived almost entirely from satellite remote sensing. The results show that there was an increasing trend toward enhanced terrestrial NPP that was superimposed on high seasonal and interannual variations associated with climate variability and that the increase was occurring in both northern and tropical latitudes. NPP generally decreased in El Nino season and increased in La Nina seasons, but the magnitude and spatial pattern of the response varied widely between individual events. Our estimates also indicate that the increases in NPP during the period were caused mainly by increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide and precipitation. The enhancement of NPP by warming was limited to northern high latitudes (above 50degreesN); in other regions, the interannual variations in NPP were correlated negatively with temperature and positively with precipitation.

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