Title of article :
Reconstructing a lost Eocene paradise: Part I. Simulating the change in global floral distribution at the initial Eocene thermal maximum
Author/Authors :
Cindy J. Shellito، نويسنده , , Lisa C. Sloan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
17
From page :
1
To page :
17
Abstract :
This study utilizes the NCAR Land Surface Model (LSM1.2) integrated with dynamic global vegetation to recreate the early Paleogene global distribution of vegetation and to examine the response of the vegetation distribution to changes in climate at the Paleocene–Eocene boundary ( 55 Ma). We run two simulations with Eocene geography driven by climatologies generated in two atmosphere global modeling experiments: one with atmospheric pCO2 at 560 ppm, and another at 1120 ppm. In both scenarios, the model produces the best match with fossil flora in the low latitudes. A comparison of model output from the two scenarios suggests that the greatest impact of climate on vegetation will occur in the high latitudes, in the Arctic Circle and in Antarctica. In these regions, greater accumulated summertime warmth in the 1120 ppm simulation allows temperate plant functional types to expand further poleward. Additionally, the high pCO2 scenario produces a greater abundance of trees over grass at these high latitudes. In the middle and low latitudes, the general distribution of plant functional types is similar in both pCO2 scenarios. Likely, a greater increment of greenhouse gases is necessary to produce the type of change evident in the mid-latitude paleobotanical record. Overall, differences between model output and fossil flora are greatest at high latitudes.
Keywords :
Eocene , Paleogene flora , Carbon dioxide , Greenhouse warming , Dynamic vegetation modeling
Journal title :
Global and Planetary Change
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Global and Planetary Change
Record number :
704857
Link To Document :
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