Literature DB >> 25409829

Agricultural Green Revolution as a driver of increasing atmospheric CO2 seasonal amplitude.

Ning Zeng1, Fang Zhao1, George J Collatz2, Eugenia Kalnay1, Ross J Salawitch1, Tristram O West3, Luis Guanter4.   

Abstract

The atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) record displays a prominent seasonal cycle that arises mainly from changes in vegetation growth and the corresponding CO2 uptake during the boreal spring and summer growing seasons and CO2 release during the autumn and winter seasons. The CO2 seasonal amplitude has increased over the past five decades, suggesting an increase in Northern Hemisphere biospheric activity. It has been proposed that vegetation growth may have been stimulated by higher concentrations of CO2 as well as by warming in recent decades, but such mechanisms have been unable to explain the full range and magnitude of the observed increase in CO2 seasonal amplitude. Here we suggest that the intensification of agriculture (the Green Revolution, in which much greater crop yield per unit area was achieved by hybridization, irrigation and fertilization) during the past five decades is a driver of changes in the seasonal characteristics of the global carbon cycle. Our analysis of CO2 data and atmospheric inversions shows a robust 15 per cent long-term increase in CO2 seasonal amplitude from 1961 to 2010, punctuated by large decadal and interannual variations. Using a terrestrial carbon cycle model that takes into account high-yield cultivars, fertilizer use and irrigation, we find that the long-term increase in CO2 seasonal amplitude arises from two major regions: the mid-latitude cropland between 25° N and 60° N and the high-latitude natural vegetation between 50° N and 70° N. The long-term trend of seasonal amplitude increase is 0.311 ± 0.027 per cent per year, of which sensitivity experiments attribute 45, 29 and 26 per cent to land-use change, climate variability and change, and increased productivity due to CO2 fertilization, respectively. Vegetation growth was earlier by one to two weeks, as measured by the mid-point of vegetation carbon uptake, and took up 0.5 petagrams more carbon in July, the height of the growing season, during 2001-2010 than in 1961-1970, suggesting that human land use and management contribute to seasonal changes in the CO2 exchange between the biosphere and the atmosphere.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 25409829     DOI: 10.1038/nature13893

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  8 in total

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Authors:  Wolfgang Buermann; Benjamin R Lintner; Charles D Koven; Alon Angert; Jorge E Pinzon; Compton J Tucker; Inez Y Fung
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-03-05       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Global and time-resolved monitoring of crop photosynthesis with chlorophyll fluorescence.

Authors:  Luis Guanter; Yongguang Zhang; Martin Jung; Joanna Joiner; Maximilian Voigt; Joseph A Berry; Christian Frankenberg; Alfredo R Huete; Pablo Zarco-Tejada; Jung-Eun Lee; M Susan Moran; Guillermo Ponce-Campos; Christian Beer; Gustavo Camps-Valls; Nina Buchmann; Damiano Gianelle; Katja Klumpp; Alessandro Cescatti; John M Baker; Timothy J Griffis
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-03-25       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Integrated BIosphere Simulator (IBIS) yield and nitrate loss predictions for Wisconsin maize receiving varied amounts of nitrogen fertilizer.

Authors:  Christopher J Kucharik; Kristofor R Brye
Journal:  J Environ Qual       Date:  2003 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.751

4.  Enhanced seasonal exchange of CO2 by northern ecosystems since 1960.

Authors:  H D Graven; R F Keeling; S C Piper; P K Patra; B B Stephens; S C Wofsy; L R Welp; C Sweeney; P P Tans; J J Kelley; B C Daube; E A Kort; G W Santoni; J D Bent
Journal:  Science       Date:  2013-08-08       Impact factor: 47.728

5.  Evaluation of terrestrial carbon cycle models for their response to climate variability and to CO2 trends.

Authors:  Shilong Piao; Stephen Sitch; Philippe Ciais; Pierre Friedlingstein; Philippe Peylin; Xuhui Wang; Anders Ahlström; Alessandro Anav; Josep G Canadell; Nan Cong; Chris Huntingford; Martin Jung; Sam Levis; Peter E Levy; Junsheng Li; Xin Lin; Mark R Lomas; Meng Lu; Yiqi Luo; Yuecun Ma; Ranga B Myneni; Ben Poulter; Zhenzhong Sun; Tao Wang; Nicolas Viovy; Soenke Zaehle; Ning Zeng
Journal:  Glob Chang Biol       Date:  2013-04-03       Impact factor: 10.863

6.  Quantifying and mapping the human appropriation of net primary production in earth's terrestrial ecosystems.

Authors:  Helmut Haberl; K Heinz Erb; Fridolin Krausmann; Veronika Gaube; Alberte Bondeau; Christoph Plutzar; Simone Gingrich; Wolfgang Lucht; Marina Fischer-Kowalski
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-07-06       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  An atmospheric perspective on North American carbon dioxide exchange: CarbonTracker.

Authors:  Wouter Peters; Andrew R Jacobson; Colm Sweeney; Arlyn E Andrews; Thomas J Conway; Kenneth Masarie; John B Miller; Lori M P Bruhwiler; Gabrielle Pétron; Adam I Hirsch; Douglas E J Worthy; Guido R van der Werf; James T Randerson; Paul O Wennberg; Maarten C Krol; Pieter P Tans
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-11-27       Impact factor: 11.205

8.  Global patterns in human consumption of net primary production.

Authors:  Marc L Imhoff; Lahouari Bounoua; Taylor Ricketts; Colby Loucks; Robert Harriss; William T Lawrence
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2004-06-24       Impact factor: 49.962

  8 in total
  15 in total

1.  Tropical nighttime warming as a dominant driver of variability in the terrestrial carbon sink.

Authors:  William R L Anderegg; Ashley P Ballantyne; W Kolby Smith; Joseph Majkut; Sam Rabin; Claudie Beaulieu; Richard Birdsey; John P Dunne; Richard A Houghton; Ranga B Myneni; Yude Pan; Jorge L Sarmiento; Nathan Serota; Elena Shevliakova; Pieter Tans; Stephen W Pacala
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2015-12-07       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Biogeochemistry: agriculture and the global carbon cycle.

Authors:  Natasha MacBean; Philippe Peylin
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2014-11-20       Impact factor: 49.962

3.  The Sensitivity of Land-Atmosphere Coupling to Modern Agriculture in the Northern Midlatitudes.

Authors:  Sonali Shukla MCDermid; Carlo Montes; Benjamin I Cook; Michael J Puma; Nancy Y Kiang; Igor Aleinov
Journal:  J Clim       Date:  2018-12-26       Impact factor: 5.148

4.  Modeling Sustainability: Population, Inequality, Consumption, and Bidirectional Coupling of the Earth and Human Systems.

Authors:  Safa Motesharrei; Jorge Rivas; Eugenia Kalnay; Ghassem R Asrar; Antonio J Busalacchi; Robert F Cahalan; Mark A Cane; Rita R Colwell; Kuishuang Feng; Rachel S Franklin; Klaus Hubacek; Fernando Miralles-Wilhelm; Takemasa Miyoshi; Matthias Ruth; Roald Sagdeev; Adel Shirmohammadi; Jagadish Shukla; Jelena Srebric; Victor M Yakovenko; Ning Zeng
Journal:  Natl Sci Rev       Date:  2016-12-11       Impact factor: 17.275

5.  A constraint on historic growth in global photosynthesis due to increasing CO2.

Authors:  T F Keenan; X Luo; M G De Kauwe; B E Medlyn; I C Prentice; B D Stocker; N G Smith; C Terrer; H Wang; Y Zhang; S Zhou
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2021-12-08       Impact factor: 49.962

6.  Impact of Changing Winds on the Mauna Loa CO2 Seasonal Cycle in Relation to the Pacific Decadal Oscillation.

Authors:  Yuming Jin; Ralph F Keeling; Christian Rödenbeck; Prabir K Patra; Stephen C Piper; Armin Schwartzman
Journal:  J Geophys Res Atmos       Date:  2022-07-01       Impact factor: 5.217

7.  COS-derived GPP relationships with temperature and light help explain high-latitude atmospheric CO2 seasonal cycle amplification.

Authors:  Lei Hu; Stephen A Montzka; Aleya Kaushik; Arlyn E Andrews; Colm Sweeney; John Miller; Ian T Baker; Scott Denning; Elliott Campbell; Yoichi P Shiga; Pieter Tans; M Carolina Siso; Molly Crotwell; Kathryn McKain; Kirk Thoning; Bradley Hall; Isaac Vimont; James W Elkins; Mary E Whelan; Parvadha Suntharalingam
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-08-17       Impact factor: 12.779

8.  Contribution of land use to the interannual variability of the land carbon cycle.

Authors:  Chao Yue; Philippe Ciais; Richard A Houghton; Alexander A Nassikas
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-06-23       Impact factor: 14.919

9.  Changes in soil organic carbon in croplands subjected to fertilizer management: a global meta-analysis.

Authors:  Pengfei Han; Wen Zhang; Guocheng Wang; Wenjuan Sun; Yao Huang
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2016-06-02       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 10.  Terrestrial Carbon Cycle Variability.

Authors:  Dennis Baldocchi; Youngryel Ryu; Trevor Keenan
Journal:  F1000Res       Date:  2016-09-26
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