Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2024)

Quantifying albedo impact and radiative forcing of management practices in European wheat cropping systems

  • Ke Yu,
  • Yang Su,
  • Philippe Ciais,
  • Ronny Lauerwald,
  • Eric Ceschia,
  • David Makowski,
  • Yidi Xu,
  • Ezzeddine Abbessi,
  • Hassan Bazzi,
  • Tiphaine Tallec,
  • Aurore Brut,
  • Bernard Heinesch,
  • Christian Brümmer,
  • Marius Schmidt,
  • Manuel Acosta,
  • Pauline Buysse,
  • Thomas Gruenwald,
  • Daniel S Goll

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ad5859
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 7
p. 074042

Abstract

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Management practices that increase the surface albedo of cultivated land could mitigate climate change, with similar effectiveness to practices that reduce greenhouse gas emissions or favor natural CO _2 sequestration. Yet, the efficiency of such practices is barely quantified. In this study, we quantified the impacts of seven different management practices on the surface albedo of winter wheat fields (nitrogen fertilizer, herbicide, fungicide, sowing, harvest, tillage, and crop residues) by analyzing observed daily albedo dynamics from eight European flux-tower sites with interpretable machine learning. We found that management practices have significant influences on surface albedo dynamics compared with climate and soil conditions. The nitrogen fertilizer application has the largest effect among the seven practices as it increases surface albedo by 0.015 ± 0.004 during the first two months after application, corresponding to a radiative forcing of −4.39 ± 1.22 W m ^−2 . Herbicide induces a modest albedo decrease of 0.005 ± 0.002 over 150 d after application by killing weeds in the fallow period only, resulting in a magnitude of radiative forcing of 1.33 ± 1.06 W m ^−2 which is higher than radiative forcing of other practices in the same period. The substantial temporal evolution of the albedo impacts of management practices increases uncertainties in the estimated albedo-mediated climate impacts of management practices. Although these albedo effects are smaller than published estimates of the greenhouse gas-mediated biogeochemical practices, they are nevertheless significant and should thus be accounted for in climate impact assessments.

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