A critical overview of model estimates of net primary productivity for the Australian continent

2004 ◽  
Vol 31 (11) ◽  
pp. 1043 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen H. Roxburgh ◽  
Damian J. Barrett ◽  
Sandra L. Berry ◽  
John O. Carter ◽  
Ian D. Davies ◽  
...  

Net primary production links the biosphere and the climate system through the global cycling of carbon, water and nutrients. Accurate quantification of net primary productivity (NPP) is therefore critical in understanding the response of the world’s ecosystems to global climate change, and how changes in ecosystems might themselves feed back to the climate system. Twelve model estimates of long-term annual NPP for the Australian continent were reviewed. These models varied considerably in the approaches adopted and the inputs required. The model estimates ranged 5-fold, from 0.67 to 3.31 Gt C y–1. Within-continent variation was similarly large, with most of the discrepancies occurring in the arid zone of Australia, which comprises most of the continent. It is also within this zone that empirical NPP data are most lacking. Comparison with a recent global-scale analysis of six dynamic global vegetation models showed a similar level of variability in continental total NPP, 0.38 to 2.85 Gt C y–1, and similar within-continent spatial variability. As a first tentative step towards model validation the twelve NPP estimates were compared with existing field measurements, although the ability to reach definitive conclusions was limited by insufficient data, and incompatibilities between the field-based observations and the model predictions. It was concluded that the current NPP-modelling capability falls short of the accuracy required for effective application in understanding the terrestrial biospheric implications of global atmospheric / climatic change. Potential methods that could be used in future work for improving modelled estimates of Australian continental NPP and their validation are discussed. These include increasing the spatial coverage of empirical NPP estimates within arid ecosystems, the use of existing high quality site data for more detailed model exploration, and a formal model inter-comparison using uniform driver datasets to investigate more intensively differences in model behaviour and assumptions.

Author(s):  
Sebastian Brune ◽  
Maria Esther Caballero Espejo ◽  
David Marcolino Nielsen ◽  
Hongmei Li ◽  
Tatiana Ilyina ◽  
...  

Abstract In the Pacific Ocean, off-equatorial Rossby waves, initiated by atmosphere-ocean interaction, modulate the inter-annual variability of the thermocline. In this study, we explore the resulting potential gain in predictability of central tropical Pacific primary production, which in this region strongly depends on the supply of macronutrients from below the thermocline. We use a decadal prediction system based on the Max Planck Institute Earth system model (MPI-ESM) to demonstrate that for the time period 1998-2014 properly initialized Rossby waves explain an increase in predictability of net primary productivity in the off-equatorial central tropical Pacific. We show that, for up to 5 years in advance, predictability of net primary productivity derived from the decadal prediction system is significantly larger than that derived from persistence alone, or an uninitialized historical simulation. The predicted signal can be explained by the following mechanism: off-equatorial Rossby waves are initiated in the eastern Pacific and travel towards the central tropical Pacific on a time scale of 2 to 6 years. On their arrival the Rossby waves modify the depths of both thermocline and nutricline, which is fundamental to the availability of nutrients in the euphotic layer. Local upwelling transports nutrients from below the nutricline into the euphotic zone, effectively transferring the Rossby wave signal to the near-surface ocean. While we show that skillful prediction of central off-equatorial tropical Pacific net primary productivity is possible, we open the door for establishing predictive systems for food web and ecosystem services in that region.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (33) ◽  
pp. 20038-20043 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laureano A. Gherardi ◽  
Osvaldo E. Sala

Carbon allocated underground through belowground net primary production represents the main input to soil organic carbon. This is of significant importance, because soil organic carbon is the third-largest carbon stock after oceanic and geological pools. However, drivers and controls of belowground productivity and the fraction of total carbon fixation allocated belowground remain uncertain. Here we estimate global belowground net primary productivity as the difference between satellite-based total net primary productivity and field observations of aboveground net primary production and assess climatic controls among biomes. On average, belowground carbon productivity is estimated as 24.7 Pg y−1, accounting for 46% of total terrestrial carbon fixation. Across biomes, belowground productivity increases with mean annual precipitation, although the rate of increase diminishes with increasing precipitation. The fraction of total net productivity allocated belowground exceeds 50% in a large fraction of terrestrial ecosystems and decreases from arid to humid ecosystems. This work adds to our understanding of the belowground carbon productivity response to climate change and provides a comprehensive global quantification of root/belowground productivity that will aid the budgeting and modeling of the global carbon cycle.


2017 ◽  
Vol 71 (3) ◽  
pp. 187-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
W Yang ◽  
T Lu ◽  
S Liu ◽  
J Jian ◽  
F Shi ◽  
...  

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