
Marko Scholze
Senior lecturer

Recent changes in the global and regional carbon cycle: analysis of first-order diagnostics
Author
Summary, in English
We analyse global and regional changes in CO2 fluxes using two simple models, an airborne fraction of anthropogenic emissions and a linear relationship with CO2 concentrations. We show that both models are able to fit the non-anthropogenic (hereafter natural) flux over the length of the atmospheric concentration record. Analysis of the linear model (including its uncertainties) suggests no significant decrease in the response of the natural carbon cycle. Recent data points rather to an increase. We apply the same linear diagnostic to fluxes from atmospheric inversions. Flux responses show clear regional and seasonal patterns driven by terrestrial uptake in the northern summer. Ocean fluxes show little or no linear response. Terrestrial models show clear responses, agreeing globally with the inversion responses, however the spatial structure is quite different, with dominant responses in the tropics rather than the northern extratropics.
Department/s
- Dept of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science
- MERGE: ModElling the Regional and Global Earth system
- BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
Publishing year
2015
Language
English
Pages
835-844
Publication/Series
Biogeosciences
Volume
12
Issue
3
Links
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Topic
- Physical Geography
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1726-4189