Impacts of extreme summers on European ecosystems: a comparative analysis of 2003, 2010 and 2018

Archive ouverte

Bastos, A. | Fu, Zheng | Ciais, Philippe | Friedlingstein, P. | Sitch, S. | Pongratz, J. | Weber, U. | Reichstein, M. | Anthoni, P. | Arneth, A. | Haverd, V. | Jain, A. | Joetzjer, E. | Knauer, J. | Lienert, S. | Loughran, T. | Mcguire, P. | Obermeier, W. | Padrón, R. | Shi, H. | Tian, H. | Zaehle, S. | Viovy, Nicolas

Edité par CCSD ; Royal Society, The -

International audience. In Europe, three widespread extreme summer drought and heat (DH) events have occurred in 2003, 2010 and 2018. These events were comparable in magnitude but varied in their geographical distribution and biomes affected. In this study, we perform a comparative analysis of the impact of the DH events on ecosystem CO2 fluxes over Europe based on an ensemble of 11 dynamic global vegetation models (DGVMs), and the observation-based FLUXCOM product. We find that all DH events were associated with decreases in net ecosystem productivity (NEP), but the gross summer flux anomalies differ between DGVMs and FLUXCOM. At the annual scale, FLUXCOM and DGVMs indicate close to neutral or above-average land CO2 uptake in DH2003 and DH2018, due to increased productivity in spring and reduced respiration in autumn and winter compensating for less photosynthetic uptake in summer. Most DGVMs estimate lower gross primary production (GPP) sensitivity to soil moisture during extreme summers than FLUXCOM. Finally, we show that the different impacts of the DH events at continental-scale GPP are in part related to differences in vegetation composition of the regions affected and to regional compensating or offsetting effects from climate anomalies beyond the DH centres

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Water-use efficiency and transpiration across European forests during the Anthropocene

Archive ouverte | Frank, D. | CCSD

International audience

Improving the ISBA(CC) land surface model simulation of water and carbon fluxes and stocks over the Amazon forest

Archive ouverte | Joetzjer, E. | CCSD

International audience. We evaluate the ISBA CC (Interaction Soil Bio-sphere Atmosphere Carbon Cycle) land surface model (LSM) over the Amazon forest, and propose a revised param-eterization of photosynthesis, inclu...

Assimilating satellite-based canopy height within an ecosystem model to estimate aboveground forest biomass

Archive ouverte | Joetzjer, E. | CCSD

International audience. Despite advances in Earth observation and modeling, estimating tropical biomass remains a challenge. Recent work suggests that integrating satellite measurements of canopy height within ecosy...

Chargement des enrichissements...