On the ability of a global atmospheric inversion to constrain variations of CO2 fluxes over Amazonia
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Date
2015Auteur
Burban, B.
Ramonet, M.
Gatti, L.V.
Wofsy, S.C.
Munger, J.W.
Dlugokencky, E.
Ciais, P.
Molina, Luis
Broquet, Gregoire
Imbach Bartol, Pablo Andrés
Chevallier, Frederic
Poulter, Benjamin
Bonal, Damien
Type
Artículo
Metadata
Afficher la notice complèteRésumé
The exchanges of carbon, water and energy between
the atmosphere and the Amazon basin have global implications
for the current and future climate. Here, the global
atmospheric inversion system of the Monitoring of Atmospheric
Composition and Climate (MACC) service is used
to study the seasonal and interannual variations of biogenic
CO2 fluxes in Amazonia during the period 2002�2010. The
system assimilated surface measurements of atmospheric
CO2 mole fractions made at more than 100 sites over the
globe into an atmospheric transport model. The present study
adds measurements from four surface stations located in
tropical South America, a region poorly covered by CO2 observations.
The estimates of net ecosystem exchange (NEE)
optimized by the inversion are compared to an independent
estimate of NEE upscaled from eddy-covariance flux measurements
in Amazonia. They are also qualitatively evaluated
against reports on the seasonal and interannual variations of
the land sink in South America from the scientific literature.
We attempt at assessing the impact on NEE of the strong
droughts in 2005 and 2010 (due to severe and longer-thanusual
dry seasons) and the extreme rainfall conditions registered
in 2009. The spatial variations of the seasonal and interannual
variability of optimized NEE are also investigated.
While the inversion supports the assumption of strong spatial
heterogeneity of these variations, the results reveal critical
limitations of the coarse-resolution transport model, the surface
observation network in South America during the recent
years and the present knowledge of modelling uncertainties
in South America that prevent our inversion from capturing
the seasonal patterns of fluxes across Amazonia. However,
some patterns from the inversion seem consistent with the
anomaly of moisture conditions in 2009. The exchanges of carbon, water and energy be-
tween the atmosphere and the Amazon basin have global im-
plications for the current and future climate. Here, the global
atmospheric inversion system of the Monitoring of Atmo-
spheric Composition and Climate (MACC) service is used
to study the seasonal and interannual variations of biogenic
CO
2
fluxes in Amazonia during the period 2002–2010. The
system assimilated surface measurements of atmospheric
CO
2
mole fractions made at more than 100 sites over the
globe into an atmospheric transport model. The present study
adds measurements from four surface stations located in
tropical South America, a region poorly covered by CO
2
ob-
servations. The estimates of net ecosystem exchange (NEE)
optimized by the inversion are compared to an independent
estimate of NEE upscaled from eddy-covariance flux mea-
surements in Amazonia. They are also qualitatively evaluated
against reports on the seasonal and interannual variations of
the land sink in South America from the scientific literature.
We attempt at assessing the impact on NEE of the strong
droughts in 2005 and 2010 (due to severe and longer-than-
usual dry seasons) and the extreme rainfall conditions regis-
tered in 2009. The spatial variations of the seasonal and in-
terannual variability of optimized NEE are also investigated.
While the inversion supports the assumption of strong spatial
heterogeneity of these variations, the results reveal critical
limitations of the coarse-resolution transport model, the sur-
face observation network in South America during the recent
years and the present knowledge of modelling uncertainties
in South America that prevent our inversion from capturing
the seasonal patterns of fluxes across Amazonia. However,
some patterns from the inversion seem consistent with the
anomaly of moisture conditions in 2009.
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