Piao Shilong, Fang Jingyun, Ciais Philippe, Peylin Philippe, Huang Yao, Sitch Stephen, Wang Tao
Department of Ecology, College of Urban and Environmental Science, and Key Laboratory for Earth Surface Processes of the Ministry of Education, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China.
Nature. 2009 Apr 23;458(7241):1009-13. doi: 10.1038/nature07944.
Global terrestrial ecosystems absorbed carbon at a rate of 1-4 Pg yr(-1) during the 1980s and 1990s, offsetting 10-60 per cent of the fossil-fuel emissions. The regional patterns and causes of terrestrial carbon sources and sinks, however, remain uncertain. With increasing scientific and political interest in regional aspects of the global carbon cycle, there is a strong impetus to better understand the carbon balance of China. This is not only because China is the world's most populous country and the largest emitter of fossil-fuel CO(2) into the atmosphere, but also because it has experienced regionally distinct land-use histories and climate trends, which together control the carbon budget of its ecosystems. Here we analyse the current terrestrial carbon balance of China and its driving mechanisms during the 1980s and 1990s using three different methods: biomass and soil carbon inventories extrapolated by satellite greenness measurements, ecosystem models and atmospheric inversions. The three methods produce similar estimates of a net carbon sink in the range of 0.19-0.26 Pg carbon (PgC) per year, which is smaller than that in the conterminous United States but comparable to that in geographic Europe. We find that northeast China is a net source of CO(2) to the atmosphere owing to overharvesting and degradation of forests. By contrast, southern China accounts for more than 65 per cent of the carbon sink, which can be attributed to regional climate change, large-scale plantation programmes active since the 1980s and shrub recovery. Shrub recovery is identified as the most uncertain factor contributing to the carbon sink. Our data and model results together indicate that China's terrestrial ecosystems absorbed 28-37 per cent of its cumulated fossil carbon emissions during the 1980s and 1990s.
在20世纪80年代和90年代,全球陆地生态系统以每年1 - 4Pg碳(PgC)的速率吸收碳,抵消了10% - 60%的化石燃料排放。然而,陆地碳源和碳汇的区域模式及成因仍不明确。随着科学界和政界对全球碳循环区域层面的兴趣日益浓厚,人们强烈希望更好地了解中国的碳平衡。这不仅是因为中国是世界上人口最多的国家,也是向大气中排放化石燃料二氧化碳最多的国家,还因为中国经历了区域差异明显的土地利用历史和气候趋势,这些共同控制着其生态系统的碳收支。在此,我们运用三种不同方法分析了20世纪80年代和90年代中国当前的陆地碳平衡及其驱动机制:通过卫星绿度测量外推的生物量和土壤碳清单、生态系统模型以及大气反演。这三种方法得出的年净碳汇估算值相似,在每年0.19 - 0.26Pg碳(PgC)之间,该数值小于美国本土,但与欧洲大陆相当。我们发现,由于森林过度采伐和退化,中国东北是大气二氧化碳的净排放源。相比之下,中国南方的碳汇占比超过65%,这可归因于区域气候变化、自20世纪80年代起实施的大规模造林计划以及灌木恢复。灌木恢复被确定为对碳汇贡献最不确定的因素。我们的数据和模型结果共同表明,在20世纪80年代和90年代,中国陆地生态系统吸收了其累计化石碳排放量的28% - 37%。