Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Chang J. F., Ciais P., Viovy N., Vuichard N., Herrero M., Havlik P., Wang X. H., Sultan Benjamin, Soussana J. F. (2016). Effect of climate change, CO2 trends, nitrogen addition, and land-cover and management intensity changes on the carbon balance of European grasslands. Global Change Biology, 22 (1), p. 338-350. ISSN 1354-1013.

Titre du document
Effect of climate change, CO2 trends, nitrogen addition, and land-cover and management intensity changes on the carbon balance of European grasslands
Année de publication
2016
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000367982900027
Auteurs
Chang J. F., Ciais P., Viovy N., Vuichard N., Herrero M., Havlik P., Wang X. H., Sultan Benjamin, Soussana J. F.
Source
Global Change Biology, 2016, 22 (1), p. 338-350 ISSN 1354-1013
Several lines of evidence point to European managed grassland ecosystems being a sink of carbon. In this study, we apply ORCHIDEE-GM a process-based carbon cycle model that describes specific management practices of pastures and the dynamics of carbon cycling in response to changes in climatic and biogeochemical drivers. The model is used to simulate changes in the carbon balance [i.e., net biome production (NBP)] of European grasslands over 1991-2010 on a 25kmx25km grid. The modeled average trend in NBP is 1.8-2.0g Cm(-2)yr(-2) during the past two decades. Attribution of this trend suggests management intensity as the dominant driver explaining NBP trends in the model (36-43% of the trend due to all drivers). A major change in grassland management intensity has occurred across Europe resulting from reduced livestock numbers. This change has inadvertently' enhanced soil C sequestration and reduced N2O and CH4 emissions by 1.2-1.5 Gt CO2-equivalent, offsetting more than 7% of greenhouse gas emissions in the whole European agricultural sector during the period 1991-2010. Land-cover change, climate change and rising CO2 also make positive and moderate contributions to the NBP trend (between 24% and 31% of the trend due to all drivers). Changes in nitrogen addition (including fertilization and atmospheric deposition) are found to have only marginal net effect on NBP trends. However, this may not reflect reality because our model has only a very simple parameterization of nitrogen effects on photosynthesis. The sum of NBP trends from each driver is larger than the trend obtained when all drivers are varied together, leaving a residual - nonattributed - term (22-26% of the trend due to all drivers) indicating negative interactions between drivers.
Plan de classement
Sciences du milieu [021] ; Etudes, transformation, conservation du milieu naturel [082]
Description Géographique
EUROPE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010066104]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010066104
Contact