Bibliography - L. T. Sentman
- Shevliakova, E., Stephen W. Pacala, S. Malyshev, G. C. Hurtt, P.C.D. Milly, J. P. Caspersen, L. T. Sentman, J. P. Fisk, C. Wirth, and C. Crevoisier, 2009: Carbon Cycling Under 300 Years of Land-Use Change: The Importance of the Secondary Vegetation Sink. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, doi:10.1029/2007GB003176
[ Abstract ]We have developed a dynamic land model (LM3V) able to simulate ecosystem
dynamics and exchanges of water, energy, and CO2 between land and atmosphere. LM3V
is specifically designed to address the consequences of land use and land management
changes including cropland and pasture dynamics, shifting cultivation, logging, fire,
and resulting patterns of secondary regrowth. Here we analyze the behavior of LM3V,
forced with the output from the Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory (GFDL)
atmospheric model AM2, observed precipitation data, and four historic scenarios of
land use change for 1700–2000. Our analysis suggests a net terrestrial carbon source
due to land use activities from 1.1 to 1.3 GtC/a during the 1990s, where the range is due
to the difference in the historic cropland distribution. This magnitude is substantially
smaller than previous estimates from other models, largely due to our estimates of a
secondary vegetation sink of 0.35 to 0.6 GtC/a in the 1990s and decelerating agricultural
land clearing since the 1960s. For the 1990s, our estimates for the pastures’ carbon
flux vary from a source of 0.37 to a sink of 0.15 GtC/a, and for the croplands our model
shows a carbon source of 0.6 to 0.9 GtC/a. Our process-based model suggests a smaller
net deforestation source than earlier bookkeeping models because it accounts for
decelerated net conversion of primary forest to agriculture and for stronger secondary
vegetation regrowth in tropical regions. The overall uncertainty is likely to be higher
than the range reported here because of uncertainty in the biomass recovery under
changing ambient conditions, including atmospheric CO2 concentration, nutrients
availability, and climate.
Direct link to page: http://cmi.princeton.edu/bibliography/results.php?author=4149