Abstract
the radiative-, momentum-, and hydrologicbalance.
This paper contributes to the ongoing debate on the
question whether positive biogeophysical feedbacks between
vegetation and climate may lead to multiple equilibria in
vegetation and climate and consequent abrupt regime shifts.
Several modelling studies argue that vegetation-climate
feedbacks at local to regional scales could be strong
enough to establish multiple states in the climate system.
An Earth Model of Intermediate Complexity, PlaSim, is
used to investigate the resilience of the climate system to
vegetation disturbance at regional to global scales. We
hypothesize that by starting with two extreme initialisations
of biomass, positive vegetation-climate feedbacks will keep
the vegetation-atmosphere system within different attraction
domains. Indeed, model integrations starting from different
initial biomass distributions diverged to clearly distinct
climate-vegetation states in terms of abiotic (precipitation
and temperature) and biotic (biomass) variables. Moreover,
we found that between these states there are several other
steady states which depend on the scale of perturbation.
From here global susceptibility maps were made showing
regions of low and high resilience. The model results
suggest that mainly the boreal and monsoon regions have
low resiliences, i.e. instable biomass equilibria, with positive
vegetation-climate feedbacks in which the biomass induced
by a perturbation is further enforced. The perturbation did
not only influence single vegetation-climate cell interactions
but also caused changes in spatial patterns of atmospheric
circulation due to neighbouring cells constituting in spatial
vegetation-climate feedbacks. Large perturbations could trigger an abrupt shift of the system towards another steady
state. Although the model setup used in our simulation
is rather simple, our results stress that the coupling
of feedbacks at multiple scales in vegetation-climate
models is essential and urgent to understand the system
dynamics for improved projections of ecosystem responses
to anthropogenic changes in climate forcing.
Original language | Undefined/Unknown |
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Pages (from-to) | 1237-1245 |
Number of pages | 9 |
Journal | Biogeosciences |
Volume | 7 |
Issue number | 4 |
Publication status | Published - 2010 |