Abstract

Abstract. Terrestrial carbon (C) cycle models applied for climate projections simulate a strong increase in net primary productivity (NPP) due to elevated atmospheric CO2 concentration during the 21st century. These models usually neglect the limited availability of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), nutrients that commonly limit plant growth and soil carbon turnover. To investigate how the projected C sequestration is altered when stoichiometric constraints on C cycling are considered, we incorporated a P cycle into the land surface model JSBACH (Jena Scheme for Biosphere–Atmosphere Coupling in Hamburg), which already includes representations of coupled C and N cycles. The model reveals a distinct geographic pattern of P and N limitation. Under the SRES (Special Report on Emissions Scenarios) A1B scenario, the accumulated land C uptake between 1860 and 2100 is 13% (particularly at high latitudes) and 16% (particularly at low latitudes) lower in simulations with N and P cycling, respectively, than in simulations without nutrient cycles. The combined effect of both nutrients reduces land C uptake by 25% compared to simulations without N or P cycling. Nutrient limitation in general may be biased by the model simplicity, but the ranking of limitations is robust against the parameterization and the inflexibility of stoichiometry. After 2100, increased temperature and high CO2 concentration cause a shift from N to P limitation at high latitudes, while nutrient limitation in the tropics declines. The increase in P limitation at high-latitudes is induced by a strong increase in NPP and the low P sorption capacity of soils, while a decline in tropical NPP due to high autotrophic respiration rates alleviates N and P limitations. The quantification of P limitation remains challenging. The poorly constrained processes of soil P sorption and biochemical mineralization are identified as the main uncertainties in the strength of P limitation. Even so, our findings indicate that global land C uptake in the 21st century is likely overestimated in models that neglect P and N limitations. In the long term, insufficient P availability might become an important constraint on C cycling at high latitudes. Accordingly, we argue that the P cycle must be included in global models used for C cycle projections.

Highlights

  • The neglect of nutrient limitation in carbon (C) cycle models has been criticized for being unjustified from an ecological point of view (Reich et al, 2006) and for overestimating terrestrial C sequestration in the future

  • The submodel for the biogeochemical cycles of JSBACH is driven by net primary productivity (NPP), leaf area index (LAI) and climate variables obtained from full climate simulations with the Max Planck Institute Earth System Model (MPI-Earth System Models (ESM)) (Roeckner et al, 2011)

  • When N and P cycling are taken into account (CN, CP, CNP) the present day C stocks are only slightly reduced (< 1 %)

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Summary

Introduction

The incorporation of a nitrogen (N) cycle into the biogeochemical components of Earth System Models (ESM) generally reduces the CO2 fertilization effect and C losses due to soil warming (Zaehle and Dalmonech, 2011). It even may change the sign of the feedback between climate and the terrestrial C cycle from positive to negative (Thornton et al, 2007; Sokolov et al, 2008). An inclusion of the terrestrial P cycle into global C cycle models seems essential to appropriately determine land C uptake

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