Bibliography - S. Gerber
- Gerber, S., L.O. Hedin, Michael Oppenheimer, Stephen W. Pacala, and E. Shevliakova, 2009: Nitrogen Cycling and Feedbacks in a Global Dynamic Land Model. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, http://www.agu.org/journals/pip/gb/2008GB003336-pip.pdf, doi:10.1029/2008GB003336
[ Abstract ]Global anthropogenic changes in carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycles call for modeling
tools that are able to address and quantify essential interactions between N, C, and
climate in terrestrial ecosystems. Here, we introduce a prognostic N cycle within the
Princeton-GFDL LM3V land model. The model captures mechanisms essential for N
cycling and their feedbacks on C cycling: N limitation of plant productivity, the N
dependence of C decomposition and stabilization in soils, removal of available N by
competing sinks, ecosystem losses that include dissolved organic and volatile N, and
ecosystem inputs through biological N fixation.
Our model captures many essential characteristics of C-N interactions, and is capable of
broadly recreating spatial and temporal variations in N and C dynamics. The introduced
N dynamics improves the model’s short term NPP response to step changes in CO2.
Consistent with theories of successional dynamics, we find that physical disturbance
induces strong C-N feedbacks, caused by intermittent N loss and subsequent N limitation.
In contrast, C-N interactions are weak when the coupled model system approaches
equilibrium. Thus, at steady state many simulated features of the carbon cycle, such as
primary productivity and carbon inventories are similar to simulations that do not include
C-N feedbacks.
Direct link to page: http://cmi.princeton.edu/bibliography/results.php?author=3588