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Interannual Variability in Global Soil Respiration on a 0.5 Degree Grid Cell Basis (1980-1994)

Dataset ·
 [1];  [2];  [3]
  1. Iowa State University, Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Organismal Biology; OSTI
  2. Ecosystem Science and Technology Branch, NASA Ames Research Center
  3. Iowa State University, Department of Civil and Construction Engineering
The Principal Investigators used a climate-driven regression model to develop spatially resolved estimates of soil-CO2 emissions from the terrestrial land surface for each month from January 1980 to December 1994, to evaluate the effects of interannual variations in climate on global soil-to-atmosphere CO2 fluxes. The mean annual global soil-CO2 flux over this 15-y period was estimated to be 80.4 (range 79.3-81.8) Pg C. Monthly variations in global soil-CO2 emissions followed closely the mean temperature cycle of the Northern Hemisphere. Globally, soil-CO2 emissions reached their minima in February and peaked in July and August. Tropical and subtropical evergreen broad-leaved forests contributed more soil-derived CO2 to the atmosphere than did any other vegetation type (~30% of the total) and exhibited a biannual cycle in their emissions. Soil-CO2 emissions in other biomes exhibited a single annual cycle that paralleled the seasonal temperature cycle. Interannual variability in estimated global soil-CO2 production is substantially less than is variability in net carbon uptake by plants (i.e., net primary productivity). Thus, soils appear to buffer atmospheric CO2 concentrations against far more dramatic seasonal and interannual differences in plant growth. Within seasonally dry biomes (savannas, bushlands, and deserts), interannual variability in soil-CO2 emmissions correlated significantly with interannual differences in precipitation. At the global scale, however, annual soil-CO2 fluxes correlated with mean annual temperature, with a slope of 3.3 PgCY-1 per degree Celsius. Although the distribution of precipitation influences seasonal and spatial patterns of soil-CO2 emissions, global warming is likely to stimulate CO2 emissions from soils.For access to the data files, click this link to the CDIAC data transition website: http://cdiac.ess-dive.lbl.gov/epubs/ndp/ndp081/ndp081.html
Research Organization:
Environmental System Science Data Infrastructure for a Virtual Ecosystem
Sponsoring Organization:
U.S. DOE > Office of Science (SC) > Basic Energy Sciences (BER) (SC-23)
Contributing Organization:
Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center (CDIAC)
DOE Contract Number:
AC05-00OR22725
OSTI ID:
1389506
Report Number(s):
osti:1389506; doi:10.3334/CDIAC/LUE.NDP081; cdiac:doi 10.3334/CDIAC/lue.ndp081
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English