Ic. Prentice et al., The carbon balance of the terrestrial biosphere: Ecosystem models and atmospheric observations, ECOL APPL, 10(6), 2000, pp. 1553-1573
Precise measurements in air are helping to clarify the fate of CO2 released
by human activities. Oxygen-to-nitrogen ratios in firn (the transition sta
te from snow to ice) and archived air samples indicate that the terrestrial
biosphere was approximately carbon-neutral on average during the 1980s. CO
2 release by forest clearance during this period must have been compensated
for by CO2 sinks elsewhere on land. Direct atmospheric O-2:N-2 measurement
s became available during the 1990s. These measurements indicate net terres
trial CO2 uptake of similar to2 Pg C/yr. From the north-south O-2:N-2 gradi
ent, it has been inferred that about this amount was taken up by terrestria
l ecosystems in the northern nontropics while additional CO2 released by tr
opical-forest clearance must have been compensated for by additional, tropi
cal, terrestrial CO2 sinks. These and other atmospheric observations provid
e independent tests of carbon-cycle reconstructions made with process-based
terrestrial ecosystem models. Such models can account for major features o
f the atmospheric-CO2 record, including the amplitude and phase of the seas
onal cycle of atmospheric-CO2 concentration at different latitudes, and muc
h of the interannual variability in the rate of increase of atmospheric CO2
. Models also predict direct effects of rising atmospheric-CO2 concentratio
n on primary production, modified by feedbacks at the plant and ecosystem l
evels. These effects translate into a global carbon sink the right order of
magnitude to compensate for forest clearance during the 1980s. The modeled
sink depends on continuously increasing CO2 to maintain disequilibrium bet
ween primary production and carbon storage. There are still substantial dif
ferences among the carbon-balance estimates made by different models, refle
cting limitations in current understanding of ecosystem-level responses to
atmospheric-CO2 concentration, especially with regard to the interactions o
f C and N cycling and interactions with land-use change. Scenario calculati
ons nevertheless agree that if atmospheric CO2 continues its rise unchecked
then the terrestrial sink will start to decline by the middle of the next
century, for reasons including saturation of the direct CO2 effect on photo
synthesis.