Abstract
To demonstrate potential future consequences of land-cover and land-use
changes beyond those for physical climate and the carbon cycle, we
present an analysis of the impacts of land-cover and land-use changes on
atmospheric chemistry and climate simulated with the chemistry-climate
model EMAC. Future (2050) land-use and land-cover changes are expected
to result in an increase of global annual soil NO emissions by ~1.2 TgN
yr-1 (9%) whereas isoprene emissions decrease by ~50 TgC yr-1 (-12%)
compared to present-day. The analysis shows increases in simulated
boundary layer ozone mixing ratios up to ~9 ppbv and more then a
doubling in hydroxyl radical concentrations over tropical deforested
areas. However, small changes in global atmosphere-biosphere fluxes of
NOx and ozone point to the significance of compensating effects. Our
study indicates that assessment of the impact of land-cover and land-use
changes on atmospheric chemistry requires a consistent representation of
emissions, deposition, canopy interactions and their dependence on
physical and biogeochemical drivers to properly account for these
compensating effects. It results in negligible changes in the
atmospheric oxidizing capacity and, consequently, in the lifetime of
methane. In contrast, the analysis indicates a pronounced increase in
oxidizing capacity as a consequence of anticipated increases in
anthropogenic emissions.
Original language | English |
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Pages | 233 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Dec 2010 |
Keywords
- [0315] ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE / Biosphere/atmosphere interactions
- [0322] ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE / Constituent sources and sinks
- [0365] ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION AND STRUCTURE / Troposphere: composition and chemistry
- [0490] BIOGEOSCIENCES / Trace gases