Pasture degradation modifies the water and carbon cycles of the Tibetan highlands
Preprint 2014 English
Authors
WB
W. Babel
TB
Tobias Biermann
HC
Heinz Coners
Abstract
1 min read
. The Tibetan Plateau has a significant role with regard to atmospheric circulation and the monsoon in particular. Changes between a closed plant cover and open bare soil are one of the striking effects of land use degradation observed with unsustainable range management or climate change, but experiments coupling changes of surface properties and processes with atmospheric feedbacks are rare and have not been undertaken in the world's two largest alpine ecosystems, the alpine steppe and the Kobresia pygmaea pastures of the Tibetan plateau. We coupled measurements of micro-lysimeter, chamber, 13C labeling, and eddy-covariance and combined the observations with land surface and atmospheric models, adapted to the highland conditions. This allowed us to analyze how three degradation stages affect the water and carbon cycle of pastures on the landscape scale within the core region of the Kobresia pygmaea ecosystem. The study revealed that increasing degradation of the Kobresia turf affects carbon allocation and strongly reduces the carbon uptake, compromising the function of Kobresia pastures as a carbon sink. Pasture degradation leads to a shift from transpiration to evaporation while the total sum of evapotranspiration remains unaffected. The results show an earlier onset of convection and cloud generation, likely triggered by enhanced evaporation. Consequently, precipitation starts earlier and clouds decrease the incoming solar radiation. In summary, the changes in surface properties by pasture degradation found on the highland have a~significant influence on larger scales.
W. Babel, Tobias Biermann, Heinz Coners, E. Falge, Elke Seeber, Johannes Ingrisch, Per-Marten Schleuß, Tobias Gerken, J. Leonbacher, Thomas Leipold, Sandra Willinghöfer, Klaus Schützenmeister, Olga Shibistova, L. Becker, Silke Hafner, Sandra Spielvogel, Xiao Gang Li, Xingliang Xu, Ying Sun, Zhang Li, Liang Yu, Y. Ma, Karsten Wesche, H.-F. Graf, Christoph Leuschner, Georg Guggenberger, Yakov Kuzyakov, Georg Miehe, Thomas Foken
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