Environmental Research Letters (Jan 2021)

Siberian 2020 heatwave increased spring CO2 uptake but not annual CO2 uptake

  • Min Jung Kwon,
  • Ashley Ballantyne,
  • Philippe Ciais,
  • Ana Bastos,
  • Frédéric Chevallier,
  • Zhihua Liu,
  • Julia K Green,
  • Chunjing Qiu,
  • John S Kimball

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac358b
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 12
p. 124030

Abstract

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Siberia experienced an unprecedented strong and persistent heatwave in winter to spring of 2020. Using bottom–up and top–down approaches, we evaluated seasonal and annual CO _2 fluxes of 2020 in the northern hemisphere (north of 30 °N), focusing on Siberia where the pronounced heatwave occurred. We found that, over Siberia, CO _2 respiration loss in response to the pronounced positive winter temperature anomaly was greater than in previous years. However, continued warming in the spring enhanced photosynthetic CO _2 uptake, resulting in the largest seasonal transition in net ecosystem CO _2 exchange; that is, the largest magnitude of the switch from the net CO _2 loss in winter to net CO _2 uptake in spring until June. However, this exceptional transition was followed by the largest reduction in CO _2 uptake in late summer due to multiple environmental constraints, including a soil moisture deficit. Despite a substantial increase of CO _2 uptake by 22 ± 9 gC m ^−2 in the spring in response to the heatwave, the mean annual CO _2 uptake over Siberia was slightly lower (3 ± 13 gC m ^−2 yr ^−1 ) than the average of the previous five years. These results highlight the highly dynamic response of seasonal carbon fluxes to extreme temperature anomalies at high latitudes, indicating a seasonal compensation between abnormal uptake and release of CO _2 in response to extreme warmth that may limit carbon sink capacity in high northern latitudes.

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