Abstract

AbstractTerrestrial ecosystems help mitigate global warming by sequestering atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) through plant photosynthesis, the rate of which is affected by surface ozone (O3) and aerosols under simultaneous impacts of climate change and rising CO2. While the changes in anthropogenic emissions perturb atmospheric components, their consequent impacts on ecosystem productivity in the future climate remain unclear. Here, we apply a fully coupled climate‐chemistry‐vegetation model, ModelE2‐YIBs, to explore the effects of O3 and aerosols from anthropogenic emissions on global gross primary productivity (GPP) under different emission scenarios at 2060. At the present day, anthropogenic air pollutants induce a GPP loss of −1.67 Pg[C] (−4%) in boreal summer with the contributions of −2.18 Pg[C] by O3 and +0.52 Pg[C] by aerosols. At 2060, the detrimental effect of air pollutants on GPP is exacerbated to −1.85 Pg[C] under a high emissions scenario but alleviated to −0.59 Pg[C] under a low emission scenario. The mitigated GPP loss in the latter scenario is owing to the effective control of anthropogenic emissions that on average reduces surface O3 concentrations by 8.14 ppbv globally relative to 2010. Although the CO2 fertilization effect is weaker in the low emission scenario, the strong decline in air pollutants brings additional GPP gains compared to the high scenario. Regionally, such GPP amelioration is close to or even overweighs the CO2 fertilization effect in eastern China and United States, suggesting that the deep cut of anthropogenic emissions can effectively promote future ecosystem productivity over the nowadays polluted regions.

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