Projecting the release of carbon from permafrost soils using a perturbed parameter ensemble modelling approach
The soils of the northern hemispheric permafrost region are estimated to contain 1100 to 1500 Pg of carbon. A substantial fraction of this carbon has been frozen and therefore protected from microbial decay for millennia. As anthropogenic climate warming progresses much of this permafrost is expecte...
| Published in: | Biogeosciences |
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| Main Authors: | , |
| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2016-04-01
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | http://www.biogeosciences.net/13/2123/2016/bg-13-2123-2016.pdf |
| Summary: | The soils of the northern hemispheric permafrost region are estimated to
contain 1100 to 1500 Pg of carbon. A substantial fraction of this carbon has
been frozen and therefore protected from microbial decay for millennia. As
anthropogenic climate warming progresses much of this permafrost is expected
to thaw. Here we conduct perturbed model experiments on a climate model of
intermediate complexity, with an improved permafrost carbon module, to
estimate with formal uncertainty bounds the release of carbon from permafrost
soils by the year 2100 and 2300 CE. We estimate that by year 2100 the permafrost
region may release between 56 (13 to 118) Pg C under Representative
Concentration Pathway (RCP) 2.6 and 102 (27 to 199) Pg C under RCP 8.5, with
substantially more to be released under each scenario by the year 2300. Our
analysis suggests that the two parameters that contribute most to the
uncertainty in the release of carbon from permafrost soils are the size of
the non-passive fraction of the permafrost carbon pool and the equilibrium
climate sensitivity. A subset of 25 model variants are integrated 8000 years
into the future under continued RCP forcing. Under the moderate RCP 4.5
forcing a remnant near-surface permafrost region persists in the high Arctic,
eventually developing a new permafrost carbon pool. Overall our simulations
suggest that the permafrost carbon cycle feedback to climate change will make
a significant contribution to climate change over the next centuries and
millennia, releasing a quantity of carbon 3 to 54 % of the cumulative
anthropogenic total. |
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| ISSN: | 1726-4170 1726-4189 |
