Parazoo Nicholas C, Commane Roisin, Wofsy Steven C, Koven Charles D, Sweeney Colm, Lawrence David M, Lindaas Jakob, Chang Rachel Y-W, Miller Charles E
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91109; Joint Institute for Regional Earth System Science and Engineering, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095;
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138; Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2016 Jul 12;113(28):7733-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1601085113. Epub 2016 Jun 27.
With rapid changes in climate and the seasonal amplitude of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the Arctic, it is critical that we detect and quantify the underlying processes controlling the changing amplitude of CO2 to better predict carbon cycle feedbacks in the Arctic climate system. We use satellite and airborne observations of atmospheric CO2 with climatically forced CO2 flux simulations to assess the detectability of Alaskan carbon cycle signals as future warming evolves. We find that current satellite remote sensing technologies can detect changing uptake accurately during the growing season but lack sufficient cold season coverage and near-surface sensitivity to constrain annual carbon balance changes at regional scale. Airborne strategies that target regular vertical profile measurements within continental interiors are more sensitive to regional flux deeper into the cold season but currently lack sufficient spatial coverage throughout the entire cold season. Thus, the current CO2 observing network is unlikely to detect potentially large CO2 sources associated with deep permafrost thaw and cold season respiration expected over the next 50 y. Although continuity of current observations is vital, strategies and technologies focused on cold season measurements (active remote sensing, aircraft, and tall towers) and systematic sampling of vertical profiles across continental interiors over the full annual cycle are required to detect the onset of carbon release from thawing permafrost.
随着北极地区气候的快速变化以及二氧化碳(CO₂)的季节性波动,至关重要的是我们要检测并量化控制CO₂变化幅度的潜在过程,以便更好地预测北极气候系统中的碳循环反馈。我们利用卫星和飞机对大气CO₂的观测以及受气候强迫的CO₂通量模拟,来评估随着未来变暖的发展,阿拉斯加碳循环信号的可探测性。我们发现,当前的卫星遥感技术能够在生长季节准确检测到变化的吸收量,但在寒冷季节缺乏足够的覆盖范围和近地表敏感性,无法在区域尺度上约束年度碳平衡变化。针对大陆内部定期垂直剖面测量的航空策略对寒冷季节后期的区域通量更为敏感,但目前在整个寒冷季节缺乏足够的空间覆盖范围。因此,当前的CO₂观测网络不太可能检测到与预计在未来50年内深层永久冻土融化和寒冷季节呼吸作用相关的潜在大量CO₂源。尽管当前观测的连续性至关重要,但需要专注于寒冷季节测量(主动遥感、飞机和高塔)以及在全年周期内对大陆内部垂直剖面进行系统采样的策略和技术,以检测永久冻土融化导致的碳释放的开始。