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Pre-anthropogenic C cycle and recent perturbations

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Presentation on theme: "Pre-anthropogenic C cycle and recent perturbations"— Presentation transcript:

1 Pre-anthropogenic C cycle and recent perturbations

2 Control of atmospheric pCO2 on different time scales
Time scale Components Processes yrs lithosphere volcanism, burial, biosphere weathering yrs hydrosphere ocean circulation and biosphere biogeochemical cycling, carbonate dissolution 10 – 102 yrs biosphere fossil fuel burning, land ecosystem shifts, land use changes

3 CO2 and temperature records
2009 (386 ppm)

4

5 Human perturbation of the global carbon budget
GtC fossil fuel emissions 7.5 83% Source deforestation 1.5 17% CO2 flux (Pg C y-1) atmospheric CO2 4.2 45% Sink land 2.6 29% Atmospheric CO2 accumulation is meaured/ The source terms are estimated from energy consumption and deforestation. The ocean sink is modelled The land sink is the residual from closing the balance (it is not directly measured). More details are: ocean 2.3 26% Time (y) Global Carbon Project (2008) 5

6 Land carbon cycling

7 Modelled land carbon storages as functions of pCO2 and T
Gerber et al (2004), GCB

8 Climate-carbon model sensitivities to CO2 and T
Friedensten et al (2006), JC

9 Ocean chlorophyll distribution

10 Air-sea exchange of CO2 from observations

11 “Observed” ocean uptake of anthropogenic CO2

12 DCESS Earth System Model
Sun Atmosphere Ocean Land Biosphere Lithosphere Ocean Sediment (Shaffer et al (2008) in Geoscientific Model Development)

13 Model geometry and some components
Atmosphere transport Land biomass Volcanic input Weathering River inflow

14 Ocean and ocean sediment submodels

15 Model fit to ocean data for standard parameter values

16 DCESS model simulation from 1765 to 2000 (1)

17 DCESS model simulation from 1765 to 2000 (2)

18 Standard vs no ocean heat uptake

19 Standard vs no ocean CO2 uptake

20 Standard vs no ocean heat nor CO2 uptake

21 Some positive climate feedbacks via oceanic CO2
*T   CO2 solubility   pCO2   T  *T  CP   pCO2   T  T   precip , winds   dust   NP   pCO2   T  T  MH   DIC   pCO2   T  (* included in the DCESS Earth System model)

22 Some negative climate feedbacks via oceanic CO2
* T   sea ice   NP   pCO2   T  *T   weathering   runoff   NP   pCO2   T  * pCO2  CO3   Alk   pCO2   T  pCO2  CO3   CP   pCO2   T  (* included in the DCESS Earth System model)

23 Scenario greenhouse gas and aerosol forcings
Total anthropogenic carbon emissions (GtC) A A1B B AG Total emissions by 2007 were 522 GtC.

24 Future Earth System projections for SRES B1 and A2 forcing
(Shaffer et al. (2009) In Nature Geoscience)

25 1.5 million year run for doubling lithosphere CO2 outgassing

26 Methane Hydrate Present estimates of MH in the ocean sediment center around GtC For comparison, available fossil fuel resources are about 5000 GtC

27 MH release and ocean warming
MH release leads to increased GHG forcing (CH4 and its oxidation product CO2) and warmer climate Warmer climate promotes the release of more MH as the ocean is warmed further Warming in the ocean leads to release of MH in ocean sediment Dickens 2003, Earth and Planetary Science Letters

28 DCESS Earth System Model
Sun Atmosphere Ocean Land Biosphere Lithosphere Ocean Sediment CH4 Hydrate


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