1] College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA [2] Climate and Environmental Physics, Physics Institute, and Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research, University of Bern, 3012 Bern, Switzerland.
College of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331, USA.
Nature. 2014 Dec 11;516(7530):234-7. doi: 10.1038/nature13971.
Nitrous oxide (N2O) is an important greenhouse gas and ozone-depleting substance that has anthropogenic as well as natural marine and terrestrial sources. The tropospheric N2O concentrations have varied substantially in the past in concert with changing climate on glacial-interglacial and millennial timescales. It is not well understood, however, how N2O emissions from marine and terrestrial sources change in response to varying environmental conditions. The distinct isotopic compositions of marine and terrestrial N2O sources can help disentangle the relative changes in marine and terrestrial N2O emissions during past climate variations. Here we present N2O concentration and isotopic data for the last deglaciation, from 16,000 to 10,000 years before present, retrieved from air bubbles trapped in polar ice at Taylor Glacier, Antarctica. With the help of our data and a box model of the N2O cycle, we find a 30 per cent increase in total N2O emissions from the late glacial to the interglacial, with terrestrial and marine emissions contributing equally to the overall increase and generally evolving in parallel over the last deglaciation, even though there is no a priori connection between the drivers of the two sources. However, we find that terrestrial emissions dominated on centennial timescales, consistent with a state-of-the-art dynamic global vegetation and land surface process model that suggests that during the last deglaciation emission changes were strongly influenced by temperature and precipitation patterns over land surfaces. The results improve our understanding of the drivers of natural N2O emissions and are consistent with the idea that natural N2O emissions will probably increase in response to anthropogenic warming.
一氧化二氮(N2O)是一种重要的温室气体和消耗臭氧层物质,既有人为的也有海洋和陆地的自然来源。在过去,随着冰期-间冰期和千年时间尺度上气候变化的变化,对流层 N2O 浓度发生了很大的变化。然而,人们并不清楚海洋和陆地来源的 N2O 排放如何响应不断变化的环境条件而变化。海洋和陆地 N2O 来源的独特同位素组成有助于在过去气候变化期间分解海洋和陆地 N2O 排放的相对变化。在这里,我们提供了来自南极泰勒冰川冰芯中捕获的气泡的过去冰川消退期间(距今 16000 至 10000 年)的 N2O 浓度和同位素数据。在我们的数据和 N2O 循环箱模型的帮助下,我们发现从末次冰期到间冰期,总 N2O 排放量增加了 30%,陆地和海洋排放对总增加量贡献相等,并且在过去的冰川消退期间总体上呈平行演变,尽管这两种来源的驱动因素之间没有先验联系。然而,我们发现陆地排放占主导地位在百年时间尺度上,这与最先进的动态全球植被和陆面过程模型一致,该模型表明,在末次冰期,排放变化强烈受到陆地表面温度和降水模式的影响。研究结果提高了我们对自然 N2O 排放驱动因素的理解,并与自然 N2O 排放可能会随着人为变暖而增加的观点一致。