The world's ocean and land ecosystems act as sinks for anthropogenic CO2, and over the last half century their combined sink strength grew steadily with increasing CO2 emissions. Recent analyses of the global carbon budget, however, have uncovered an abrupt, substantial (????1?PgC?yr?1) and sustained increase in the land sink in the late 1980s whose origin remains unclear. In the absence of this prominent shift in the land sink, increases in atmospheric CO2 concentrations since the late 1980s would have been ????30?% larger than observed (or ????12?ppm above current levels). Global data analyses are limited in regards to attributing causes to changes in the land sink because different regions are likely responding to different drivers. Here...
To assess global carbon cycle variability, we decompose the net land carbon sink into the sum of gro...
Atmospheric measurements indicate that the terrestrial carbon sink increased substantially from the ...
Anthropogenic land use and land cover changes (LULCC) have a large impact on the global terrestrial ...
The world's ocean and land ecosystems act as sinks for anthropogenic CO<sub>2</sub>, and over the la...
Several lines of evidence point to an increase in the activity of the terrestrial biosphere over rec...
Terrestrial ecosystems play a significant role in the global carbon cycle and offset a large fractio...
The global land and ocean carbon sinks have increased proportionally with increasing carbon dioxide ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Nature Research via the DOI in this recordD...
International audienceThe global land and ocean carbon sinks have increased proportionally with incr...
While the global carbon budget (GCB) is relatively well constrained over the last decades of the 20t...
International audienceSatellite observations show that leaf area index (LAI) has increased globally ...
Our understanding of Earth's carbon climate system depends critically upon interactions between risi...
To assess global carbon cycle variability, we decompose the net land carbon sink into the sum of gro...
Atmospheric measurements indicate that the terrestrial carbon sink increased substantially from the ...
Anthropogenic land use and land cover changes (LULCC) have a large impact on the global terrestrial ...
The world's ocean and land ecosystems act as sinks for anthropogenic CO<sub>2</sub>, and over the la...
Several lines of evidence point to an increase in the activity of the terrestrial biosphere over rec...
Terrestrial ecosystems play a significant role in the global carbon cycle and offset a large fractio...
The global land and ocean carbon sinks have increased proportionally with increasing carbon dioxide ...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Nature Research via the DOI in this recordD...
International audienceThe global land and ocean carbon sinks have increased proportionally with incr...
While the global carbon budget (GCB) is relatively well constrained over the last decades of the 20t...
International audienceSatellite observations show that leaf area index (LAI) has increased globally ...
Our understanding of Earth's carbon climate system depends critically upon interactions between risi...
To assess global carbon cycle variability, we decompose the net land carbon sink into the sum of gro...
Atmospheric measurements indicate that the terrestrial carbon sink increased substantially from the ...
Anthropogenic land use and land cover changes (LULCC) have a large impact on the global terrestrial ...