Published September 13, 2022 | Version v1
Software Open

Data associated with: Emergence of the physiological effects of elevated CO2 on land-atmosphere exchange of carbon and water

  • 1. Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry
  • 2. Joint Research Centre
  • 3. Technical University Munich

Description

Elevated atmospheric CO2 (eCO2) influences the carbon assimilation rate and stomatal conductance of plants and thereby can affect the global cycles of carbon and water. Yet, the detection of these physiological effects of eCO2 in observational data remains challenging, because natural variations and confounding factors (e.g., warming) can overshadow the eCO2 effects in observational data of real-world ecosystems. In this study, we aim at developing a method to detect the emergence of the physiological CO2 effects on various variables related to carbon and water fluxes. We mimic the observational setting in ecosystems using a comprehensive process-based land surface model QUINCY to simulate the leaf-level effects of increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations and their century-long propagation through the terrestrial carbon and water cycles across different climate regimes and biomes. We then develop a statistical method based on the signal-to-noise ratio to detect the emergence of the eCO2 effects. The signal in gross primary production (GPP) emerges at relatively low CO2 increase (Δ[CO2] ~ 20 ppm) where the leaf area index is relatively high. Compared to GPP, the eCO2 effect causing reduced transpiration water flux (normalized to leaf area) emerges only at relatively high CO2 increase (Δ[CO2] >> 40 ppm), due to the high sensitivity to climate variability and thus lower signal-to-noise ratio. In general, the response to eCO2 is detectable earlier for variables of the carbon cycle than the water cycle, when plant productivity is not limited by climatic constraints, and stronger in forest-dominated rather than in grass-dominated ecosystems. Our results provide a step toward when and where we expect to detect physiological CO2 effects in in-situ flux measurements, how to detect them and encourage future efforts to improve the understanding and quantification of these effects in observations of terrestrial carbon and water dynamics.

Notes

Model Code is available under the DOI: 10.17871/quincy-model-2019 (branch name: quincy-land/release04)
Data and code to support this analysis are uploaded.

Funding provided by: German Research Foundation
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
Award Number: 391059971

Funding provided by: H2020 European Research Council
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100010663
Award Number: 647204

Funding provided by: H2020 European Research Council
Crossref Funder Registry ID: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100010663
Award Number: 855187

Funding provided by: International Max Planck Research School for Global Biogeochemical Cycles *
Crossref Funder Registry ID:
Award Number:

Files

Data_analysis.ipynb

Files (147.7 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:70c81dd6fa5e7415476d5b677cece9cd
66.6 kB Preview Download
md5:bfa017c7ca923a92243918fcc0de1f00
81.0 kB Download

Additional details

Related works

Is source of
10.5061/dryad.3xsj3txk5 (DOI)