Abstract

Abstract. Although Arctic tundra has been estimated to cover only 8% of the global land surface, the large and potentially labile carbon pools currently stored in tundra soils have the potential for large emissions of carbon (C) under a warming climate. These emissions as radiatively active greenhouse gases in the form of both CO2 and CH4 could amplify global warming. Given the potential sensitivity of these ecosystems to climate change and the expectation that the Arctic will experience appreciable warming over the next century, it is important to assess whether responses of C exchange in tundra regions are likely to enhance or mitigate warming. In this study we compared analyses of C exchange of Arctic tundra between 1990 and 2006 among observations, regional and global applications of process-based terrestrial biosphere models, and atmospheric inversion models. Syntheses of flux observations and inversion models indicate that the annual exchange of CO2 between Arctic tundra and the atmosphere has large uncertainties that cannot be distinguished from neutral balance. The mean estimate from an ensemble of process-based model simulations suggests that Arctic tundra has acted as a sink for atmospheric CO2 in recent decades, but based on the uncertainty estimates it cannot be determined with confidence whether these ecosystems represent a weak or a strong sink. Tundra was 0.6 °C warmer in the 2000s compared to the 1990s. The central estimates of the observations, process-based models, and inversion models each identify stronger sinks in the 2000s compared with the 1990s. Some of the process models indicate that this occurred because net primary production increased more in response to warming than heterotrophic respiration. Similarly, the observations and the applications of regional process-based models suggest that CH4 emissions from Arctic tundra have increased from the 1990s to 2000s because of the sensitivity of CH4 emissions to warmer temperatures. Based on our analyses of the estimates from observations, process-based models, and inversion models, we estimate that Arctic tundra was a sink for atmospheric CO2 of 110 Tg C yr−1 (uncertainty between a sink of 291 Tg C yr−1 and a source of 80 Tg C yr−1) and a source of CH4 to the atmosphere of 19 Tg C yr−1 (uncertainty between sources of 8 and 29 Tg C yr−1). The suite of analyses conducted in this study indicate that it is important to reduce uncertainties in the observations, process-based models, and inversions in order to better understand the degree to which Arctic tundra is influencing atmospheric CO2 and CH4 concentrations. The reduction of uncertainties can be accomplished through (1) the strategic placement of more CO2 and CH4 monitoring stations to reduce uncertainties in inversions, (2) improved observation networks of ground-based measurements of CO2 and CH4 exchange to understand exchange in response to disturbance and across gradients of climatic and hydrological variability, and (3) the effective transfer of information from enhanced observation networks into process-based models to improve the simulation of CO2 and CH4 exchange from Arctic tundra to the atmosphere.

Highlights

  • The distribution of the Arctic tundra biome covers approximately 8 % of the global land surface, largely north of the boreal forest treeline (McGuire et al, 1997)

  • Most direct observational studies of the exchange of CO2 between tundra and the atmosphere have been conducted during the summer growing season. These studies generally indicate that Arctic tundra has been a sink for atmospheric CO2 during the summer in all subregions of the Arctic (i.e., net ecosystem exchange (NEE) is largely negative; Fig. 2) and that there has not been a substantial change in the sink strength between the 1990s and 2000s (Table 3)

  • The syntheses of the compilation of flux observations and of inversion model results for Arctic tundra in this study indicate that the annual exchange of CO2 between Arctic tundra and the atmosphere has large uncertainties that cannot be distinguished from neutral balance in the 1990s and 2000s

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Summary

Introduction

The distribution of the Arctic tundra biome covers approximately 8 % of the global land surface, largely north of the boreal forest treeline (McGuire et al, 1997). Plant growth is restricted to a relatively short growing season on the order of three months or less during the boreal summer. The tundra biome is home to approximately 1800 species of vascular plants and has less species diversity than more temperate biomes (Asner et al, 2003; Callaghan et al, 2005). The spatial and temporal dynamics of permafrost and periodic disturbance are crucial in shaping the arctic landscape and its heterogeneity, with important consequences for the areal extent of wetlands and the exchange of carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4)

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