A Multiyear Gridded Data Ensemble of Surface Biogenic Carbon Fluxes for North America: Evaluation and Analysis of Results

Yu Zhou, Christopher A. Williams, Thomas Lauvaux, Kenneth J. Davis, Sha Feng, Ian Baker, Scott Denning, Yaxing Wei

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Scopus citations

Abstract

Accurate and fine-scale estimates of biogenic carbon fluxes are critical for measuring and monitoring the biosphere's responses and feedback to the climate system. Currently available data products from flux towers and model-intercomparison projects struggle to adequately represent spatiotemporal dynamics of surface biogenic carbon fluxes, and to quantify their uncertainties, which also are crucial to atmospheric inversion systems. To address these gaps, we introduce a new perturbed-parameter model ensemble with the CASA model to estimate surface biogenic carbon fluxes at monthly and 3-hourly scales for North America at ~500-m and 5-km resolutions. We first use the Extended Fourier Amplitude Sensitivity Testing to choose the three most sensitive parameters to be perturbed, maximum light use efficiency (Emax), optimal temperature of photosynthesis (Topt), and temperature response of respiration (Q10). The initial range for each parameter is broadly sampled for the L1 ensemble, but then we pruned Emax with site-level primary productivity to derive an L2 ensemble with narrower uncertainty ranges. Ensembles are strongly correlated with site-level results at both monthly and 3-hourly scales, and the spread across L1/L2 ensemble members encompasses the range of AmeriFlux observations. Monthly variability in the L2 ensemble mean is 85% of the observed variability. The L2 ensemble outperforms diverse data products with the highest Taylor skill scores at diurnal to annual scales. The ensemble's seasonality agrees well with other models for most biome types and in high and middle latitudes, but inconsistencies are found in subtropical and tropical ecoregions and for annual totals over North America.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere2019JG005314
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences
Volume125
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 1 2020

Funding

This work was primarily funded by the Atmospheric Carbon and Transport (ACT)-America project, a NASA Earth Venture Suborbital 2 project supported by NASA's Earth Science Division. Funding for this work came from the NASA ACT-America Project under awards NNX16AN17G and NNX15AG76G. This work used eddy covariance data acquired and shared by the FLUXNET community, including AmeriFlux and Fluxnet-Canada. Funding for AmeriFlux data resources was provided by the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science. CarbonTracker (CT2017) results were provided by NOAA ESRL, Boulder, Colorado, USA from the website at http://carbontracker.noaa.gov. The 3-hourly output from Multi-scale Synthesis and Terrestrial Model Intercomparison Project (MsTMIP; http://nacp.ornl.gov/MsTMIP.shtml) can be found at the Modeling and Synthesis Thematic Data Center at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL; http://nacp.ornl.gov). We thank Klaus Keller at the Pennsylvania State University for the helpful suggestions on the model-data comparison. We thank the anonymous reviewers and the Associate Editor for the constructive comments on the manuscript.

Keywords

  • biogeochemical modeling
  • model-data comparison
  • parameters
  • sensitivity analysis

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'A Multiyear Gridded Data Ensemble of Surface Biogenic Carbon Fluxes for North America: Evaluation and Analysis of Results'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this