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(2005) Drier summers cancel out the CO2 uptake enhancement induced by warmer springs.

Source
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS) (128)
Type
P - Paper (2851)
Peer Review
1 - High (2301)
Audience
S - Specialist (3514)
Pages
10823-10827
Journal Number
102
Notes

Abstract:
An increase in photosynthetic activity of the northern hemisphere terrestrial vegetation, as derived from satellite observations, has
been reported in previous studies. The amplitude of the seasonal cycle of the annually detrended atmospheric CO2 in the northern hemisphere (an indicator of biospheric activity) also increased
during that period.Wefound, by analyzing the annually detrended CO2 record by season, that early summer (June) CO2 concentrations indeed decreased from 1985 to 1991, and they have continued to decrease from 1994 up to 2002. This decrease indicates accelerating
springtime net CO2 uptake. However, the CO2 minimum concentration in late summer (an indicator of net growing-season uptake) showed no positive trend since 1994, indicating that lower net CO2
uptake during summer cancelled out the enhanced uptake during spring. Using a recent satellite normalized difference vegetation index data set and climate data, we show that this lower summer
uptake is probably the result of hotter and drier summers in both mid and high latitudes, demonstrating that a warming climate does not necessarily lead to higher CO2 growing-season uptake, even in high-latitude ecosystems that are considered to be temperature limited.

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