TY - JOUR
T1 - Feedbacks of soil properties on vegetation during the Green Sahara period
AU - Chen, Weizhe
AU - Ciais, Philippe
AU - Zhu, Dan
AU - Ducharne, Agnès
AU - Viovy, Nicolas
AU - Qiu, Chunjing
AU - Huang, Chunju
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2020/7/15
Y1 - 2020/7/15
N2 - During the early to middle Holocene, the Sahara received enhanced precipitation and was covered by steppe-like vegetation with a large-scale hydrographic network of lakes, wetlands and fans, which is known as the Green Sahara (GS). However, most coupled land-atmosphere models underestimate the precipitation and vegetation cover, suggesting that critical atmospheric or land surface processes are lacking in those models. Climate-induced vegetation cover change can modify soil texture and physical properties over the long term, which in turn have feedbacks on vegetation. In this study, we examine five plausible soil-vegetation processes in a land surface model, which are expected to increase soil moisture for plants and possibly sustain equilibrium vegetation for a lower rainfall level. The annual precipitation required during the GS epoch to match the modelled vegetation distribution with paleorecords is inferred. Results demonstrate that these soil-vegetation processes have strong positive impacts on vegetation and soil moisture, especially the increase of soil evaporative resistance. After including all soil feedbacks on vegetation, the model requires only a mean precipitation of ∼400 mm/yr to reproduce the pollen-inferred GS vegetation, instead of ∼600 mm/yr when no soil feedback is included. From the mid-Holocene to pre-industrial period, we infer that terrestrial carbon stocks decrease by ∼58 PgC due to the removal of carbon in vegetation, soil and litter pools of the GS. This work highlights the importance of soil-vegetation interactions for simulating dry-region vegetation coverage in models, and the impacts of natural land cover change on carbon budgets in the geological past.
AB - During the early to middle Holocene, the Sahara received enhanced precipitation and was covered by steppe-like vegetation with a large-scale hydrographic network of lakes, wetlands and fans, which is known as the Green Sahara (GS). However, most coupled land-atmosphere models underestimate the precipitation and vegetation cover, suggesting that critical atmospheric or land surface processes are lacking in those models. Climate-induced vegetation cover change can modify soil texture and physical properties over the long term, which in turn have feedbacks on vegetation. In this study, we examine five plausible soil-vegetation processes in a land surface model, which are expected to increase soil moisture for plants and possibly sustain equilibrium vegetation for a lower rainfall level. The annual precipitation required during the GS epoch to match the modelled vegetation distribution with paleorecords is inferred. Results demonstrate that these soil-vegetation processes have strong positive impacts on vegetation and soil moisture, especially the increase of soil evaporative resistance. After including all soil feedbacks on vegetation, the model requires only a mean precipitation of ∼400 mm/yr to reproduce the pollen-inferred GS vegetation, instead of ∼600 mm/yr when no soil feedback is included. From the mid-Holocene to pre-industrial period, we infer that terrestrial carbon stocks decrease by ∼58 PgC due to the removal of carbon in vegetation, soil and litter pools of the GS. This work highlights the importance of soil-vegetation interactions for simulating dry-region vegetation coverage in models, and the impacts of natural land cover change on carbon budgets in the geological past.
KW - Bare soil evaporation
KW - Dynamic global vegetation model (DGVM)
KW - Mid-holocene
KW - Soil organic carbon
KW - Soil texture
KW - Water infiltration
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85086590740
U2 - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2020.106389
DO - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2020.106389
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85086590740
SN - 0277-3791
VL - 240
JO - Quaternary Science Reviews
JF - Quaternary Science Reviews
M1 - 106389
ER -