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Investigating spatial differentiation of model parameters in a carbon cycle data assimilation system

Ziehn, T ; Knorr, W LU and Scholze, Marko LU (2011) In Global Biogeochemical Cycles 25. p.2021-2021
Abstract
Better estimates of the net exchange of CO(2) between the atmosphere and the terrestrial biosphere are urgently needed to improve predictions of future CO(2) levels in the atmosphere. The carbon cycle data assimilation system (CCDAS) offers the capability of inversion, while it is at the same time based on a process model that can be used independent of observational data. CCDAS allows the assimilation of atmospheric CO(2) concentrations into the terrestrial biosphere model BETHY, constraining its process parameters via an adjoint approach. Here, we investigate the effect of spatial differentiation of a universal carbon balance parameter of BETHY on posterior net CO(2) fluxes and their uncertainties. The parameter, beta, determines the... (More)
Better estimates of the net exchange of CO(2) between the atmosphere and the terrestrial biosphere are urgently needed to improve predictions of future CO(2) levels in the atmosphere. The carbon cycle data assimilation system (CCDAS) offers the capability of inversion, while it is at the same time based on a process model that can be used independent of observational data. CCDAS allows the assimilation of atmospheric CO(2) concentrations into the terrestrial biosphere model BETHY, constraining its process parameters via an adjoint approach. Here, we investigate the effect of spatial differentiation of a universal carbon balance parameter of BETHY on posterior net CO(2) fluxes and their uncertainties. The parameter, beta, determines the characteristics of the slowly decomposing soil carbon pool and represents processes that are difficult to model explicitly. Two cases are studied with an assimilation period of 1979 to 2003. In the base case, there is a separate beta for each plant functional type (PFT). In the regionalization case, beta is differentiated not only by PFT, but also according to each of 11 large continental regions as used by the TransCom project. We find that the choice of spatial differentiation has a profound impact not only on the posterior (optimized) fluxes and their uncertainties, but even more so on the spatial covariance of the uncertainties. Differences are most pronounced in tropical regions, where observations are sparse. While regionalization leads to an improved fit to the observations by about 20% compared to the base case, we notice large spatial variations in the posterior net CO(2) flux on a grid cell level. The results illustrate the need for universal process formulations in global-scale atmospheric CO(2) inversion studies, at least as long as the observational network is too sparse to resolve spatial fluctuations at the regional scale. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Global Biogeochemical Cycles
volume
25
pages
2021 - 2021
publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
external identifiers
  • scopus:79959387414
ISSN
0886-6236
DOI
10.1029/2010GB003886
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
99e1ed33-1c18-46b6-a4c2-58776348d371 (old id 4448621)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 13:09:20
date last changed
2024-02-14 13:33:26
@article{99e1ed33-1c18-46b6-a4c2-58776348d371,
  abstract     = {{Better estimates of the net exchange of CO(2) between the atmosphere and the terrestrial biosphere are urgently needed to improve predictions of future CO(2) levels in the atmosphere. The carbon cycle data assimilation system (CCDAS) offers the capability of inversion, while it is at the same time based on a process model that can be used independent of observational data. CCDAS allows the assimilation of atmospheric CO(2) concentrations into the terrestrial biosphere model BETHY, constraining its process parameters via an adjoint approach. Here, we investigate the effect of spatial differentiation of a universal carbon balance parameter of BETHY on posterior net CO(2) fluxes and their uncertainties. The parameter, beta, determines the characteristics of the slowly decomposing soil carbon pool and represents processes that are difficult to model explicitly. Two cases are studied with an assimilation period of 1979 to 2003. In the base case, there is a separate beta for each plant functional type (PFT). In the regionalization case, beta is differentiated not only by PFT, but also according to each of 11 large continental regions as used by the TransCom project. We find that the choice of spatial differentiation has a profound impact not only on the posterior (optimized) fluxes and their uncertainties, but even more so on the spatial covariance of the uncertainties. Differences are most pronounced in tropical regions, where observations are sparse. While regionalization leads to an improved fit to the observations by about 20% compared to the base case, we notice large spatial variations in the posterior net CO(2) flux on a grid cell level. The results illustrate the need for universal process formulations in global-scale atmospheric CO(2) inversion studies, at least as long as the observational network is too sparse to resolve spatial fluctuations at the regional scale.}},
  author       = {{Ziehn, T and Knorr, W and Scholze, Marko}},
  issn         = {{0886-6236}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{2021--2021}},
  publisher    = {{American Geophysical Union (AGU)}},
  series       = {{Global Biogeochemical Cycles}},
  title        = {{Investigating spatial differentiation of model parameters in a carbon cycle data assimilation system}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2010GB003886}},
  doi          = {{10.1029/2010GB003886}},
  volume       = {{25}},
  year         = {{2011}},
}