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Millennial-scale hydroclimate control of tropical soil carbon storage 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020, 581 (7806) : 63-+
作者:  Lam, Tommy Tsan-Yuk;  Jia, Na;  Zhang, Ya-Wei;  Shum, Marcus Ho-Hin;  Jiang, Jia-Fu;  Zhu, Hua-Chen;  Tong, Yi-Gang;  Shi, Yong-Xia;  Ni, Xue-Bing;  Liao, Yun-Shi;  Li, Wen-Juan;  Jiang, Bao-Gui;  Wei, Wei;  Yuan, Ting-Ting;  Zheng, Kui;  Cui, Xiao-Ming;  Li, Jie;  Pei, Guang-Qian
收藏  |  浏览/下载:25/0  |  提交时间:2020/05/13

Over the past 18,000 years, the residence time and amount of soil carbon stored in the Ganges-Brahmaputra basin have been controlled by the intensity of Indian Summer Monsoon rainfall, with greater carbon destabilization during wetter, warmer conditions.


The storage of organic carbon in the terrestrial biosphere directly affects atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide over a wide range of timescales. Within the terrestrial biosphere, the magnitude of carbon storage can vary in response to environmental perturbations such as changing temperature or hydroclimate(1), potentially generating feedback on the atmospheric inventory of carbon dioxide. Although temperature controls the storage of soil organic carbon at mid and high latitudes(2,3), hydroclimate may be the dominant driver of soil carbon persistence in the tropics(4,5)  however, the sensitivity of tropical soil carbon turnover to large-scale hydroclimate variability remains poorly understood. Here we show that changes in Indian Summer Monsoon rainfall have controlled the residence time of soil carbon in the Ganges-Brahmaputra basin over the past 18,000 years. Comparison of radiocarbon ages of bulk organic carbon and terrestrial higher-plant biomarkers with co-located palaeohydrological records(6) reveals a negative relationship between monsoon rainfall and soil organic carbon stocks on a millennial timescale. Across the deglaciation period, a depletion of basin-wide soil carbon stocks was triggered by increasing rainfall and associated enhanced soil respiration rates. Our results suggest that future hydroclimate changes in tropical regions are likely to accelerate soil carbon destabilization, further increasing atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations.


  
Coupling of Indo-Pacific climate variability over the last millennium 期刊论文
NATURE, 2020
作者:  Chow, Brian W.;  Nunez, Vicente;  Kaplan, Luke;  Granger, Adam J.;  Bistrong, Karina;  Zucker, Hannah L.;  Kumar, Payal;  Sabatini, Bernardo L.;  Gu, Chenghua
收藏  |  浏览/下载:34/0  |  提交时间:2020/05/13

Coral records indicate that the variability of the Indian Ocean Dipole over the last millennium is strongly coupled to variability in the El Nino/Southern Oscillation and that recent extremes are unusual but not unprecedented.


The Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) affects climate and rainfall across the world, and most severely in nations surrounding the Indian Ocean(1-4). The frequency and intensity of positive IOD events increased during the twentieth century(5) and may continue to intensify in a warming world(6). However, confidence in predictions of future IOD change is limited by known biases in IOD models(7) and the lack of information on natural IOD variability before anthropogenic climate change. Here we use precisely dated and highly resolved coral records from the eastern equatorial Indian Ocean, where the signature of IOD variability is strong and unambiguous, to produce a semi-continuous reconstruction of IOD variability that covers five centuries of the last millennium. Our reconstruction demonstrates that extreme positive IOD events were rare before 1960. However, the most extreme event on record (1997) is not unprecedented, because at least one event that was approximately 27 to 42 per cent larger occurred naturally during the seventeenth century. We further show that a persistent, tight coupling existed between the variability of the IOD and the El Nino/Southern Oscillation during the last millennium. Indo-Pacific coupling was characterized by weak interannual variability before approximately 1590, which probably altered teleconnection patterns, and by anomalously strong variability during the seventeenth century, which was associated with societal upheaval in tropical Asia. A tendency towards clustering of positive IOD events is evident in our reconstruction, which-together with the identification of extreme IOD variability and persistent tropical Indo-Pacific climate coupling-may have implications for improving seasonal and decadal predictions and managing the climate risks of future IOD variability.


  
Cut-off low systems over Iraq: Contribution to annual precipitation and synoptic analysis of extreme events 期刊论文
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 2019
作者:  Al-Nassar, Ali Raheem;  Pelegri, Josep L.;  Sangra, Pablo;  Alarcon, Marta;  Jansa, Agusti
收藏  |  浏览/下载:6/0  |  提交时间:2019/11/27
cut-off low  extreme precipitation  Middle East  moisture source  rainfall records  synoptic conditions  
GSDR: A Global Sub-Daily Rainfall Dataset 期刊论文
JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2019, 32 (15) : 4715-4729
作者:  Lewis, Elizabeth;  Fowler, Hayley;  Alexander, Lisa;  Dunn, Robert;  McClean, Fergus;  Barbero, Renaud;  Guerreiro, Selma;  Li, Xiao-Feng;  Blenkinsop, Stephen
收藏  |  浏览/下载:22/0  |  提交时间:2019/11/27
Rainfall  Climate records  Data processing  
Increased Occurrence of Record-Wet and Record-Dry Months Reflect Changes in Mean Rainfall 期刊论文
GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2018, 45 (24) : 13468-13476
作者:  Lehmann, J.;  Mempel, F.;  Coumou, D.
收藏  |  浏览/下载:8/0  |  提交时间:2019/04/09
record statistics  rainfall extremes  dry records  observations  
Characterizing and Modeling Seasonality in Extreme Rainfall 期刊论文
WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2018, 54 (9) : 6242-6258
作者:  Iliopoulou, Theano;  Koutsoyiannis, Demetris;  Montanari, Alberto
收藏  |  浏览/下载:9/0  |  提交时间:2019/04/09
seasonality  extreme daily rainfall  AIC  seasonal clustering  Generalized Extreme Value distribution  long rainfall records