Quantifying the negative feedback of vegetation to greenhouse warming: A modeling approach
Geophysical Research Letters 37(23)
Article 2010 English
Authors
LB
Lahouari Bounoua
FH
F. G. HALL
PS
P. J. Sellers
Abstract
1 min read
Several climate models indicate that in a 2 × CO 2 environment, temperature and precipitation would increase and runoff would increase faster than precipitation. These models, however, did not allow the vegetation to increase its leaf density as a response to the physiological effects of increased CO 2 and consequent changes in climate. Other assessments included these interactions but did not account for the vegetation down‐regulation to reduce plant's photosynthetic activity and as such resulted in a weak vegetation negative response. When we combine these interactions in climate simulations with 2 × CO 2 , the associated increase in precipitation contributes primarily to increase evapotranspiration rather than surface runoff, consistent with observations, and results in an additional cooling effect not fully accounted for in previous simulations with elevated CO 2 . By accelerating the water cycle, this feedback slows but does not alleviate the projected warming, reducing the land surface warming by 0.6°C. Compared to previous studies, these results imply that long term negative feedback from CO 2 ‐induced increases in vegetation density could reduce temperature following a stabilization of CO 2 concentration.
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