Author/Authors :
Feng Deng، نويسنده , , By JING M. CHEN، نويسنده , , MISA ISHIZAWA، نويسنده , , CHIU-WAI YUEN، نويسنده , , GANG MO، نويسنده , , KAZ HIGUCHI ، نويسنده , , DOUGLAS CHAN، نويسنده , , SHAMIL MAKSYUTOV، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
nested inverse modelling system was developed for estimating carbon fluxes of 30 regions in North America and 20
regions for the rest of the globe. Monthly inverse modelling was conducted using CO2 concentration measurements of
3 yr (2001–2003) at 88 sites. Inversion results show that in 2003 the global carbon sink is −2.76 ± 0.55 Pg C. Oceans
and lands are responsible for 88.5% and 11.5% of the sink, respectively. Northern lands are the largest sinks with North
America contributing a sink of −0.97 ± 0.21 Pg C in 2003, of which Canada’s sink is −0.34 ± 0.14 Pg C.
For Canada, the inverse results show a spatial pattern in agreement, for the most part, with a carbon source and sink
distribution map previously derived through ecosystem modelling. However, discrepancies in the spatial pattern and
in flux magnitude between these two estimates exist in certain regions. Numerical experiments with a full covariance
matrix, with the consideration of the error structure of the a priori flux field based on meteorological variables among the
30 North America regions, resulted in a small but meaningful improvement in the inverted fluxes. Uncertainty reduction
analysis suggests that new observation sites are still needed to further improve the inversion for these 30 regions in
North America.