TY - JOUR
T1 - Biospheric feedback effects in a synchronously coupled model of human and Earth systems
AU - Thornton, Peter E.
AU - Calvin, Katherine
AU - Jones, Andrew D.
AU - Di Vittorio, Alan V.
AU - Bond-Lamberty, Ben
AU - Chini, Louise
AU - Shi, Xiaoying
AU - Mao, Jiafu
AU - Collins, William D.
AU - Edmonds, Jae
AU - Thomson, Allison
AU - Truesdale, John
AU - Craig, Anthony
AU - Branstetter, Marcia L.
AU - Hurtt, George
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature. All rights reserved.
PY - 2017/6/30
Y1 - 2017/6/30
N2 - Fossil fuel combustion and land-use change are the two largest contributors to industrial-era increases in atmospheric CO2 concentration. Projections of these are thus fundamental inputs for coupled Earth system models (ESMs) used to estimate the physical and biological consequences of future climate system forcing. While historical data sets are available to inform past and current climate analyses, assessments of future climate change have relied on projections of energy and land use from energy-economic models, constrained by assumptions about future policy, land-use patterns and socio-economic development trajectories. Here we show that the climatic impacts on land ecosystems drive significant feedbacks in energy, agriculture, land use and carbon cycle projections for the twenty-first century. We find that exposure of human-appropriated land ecosystem productivity to biospheric change results in reductions of land area used for crops; increases in managed forest area and carbon stocks; decreases in global crop prices; and reduction in fossil fuel emissions for a low-mid-range forcing scenario. The feedbacks between climate-induced biospheric change and human system forcings to the climate system - demonstrated here - are handled inconsistently, or excluded altogether, in the one-way asynchronous coupling of energy-economic models to ESMs used to date.
AB - Fossil fuel combustion and land-use change are the two largest contributors to industrial-era increases in atmospheric CO2 concentration. Projections of these are thus fundamental inputs for coupled Earth system models (ESMs) used to estimate the physical and biological consequences of future climate system forcing. While historical data sets are available to inform past and current climate analyses, assessments of future climate change have relied on projections of energy and land use from energy-economic models, constrained by assumptions about future policy, land-use patterns and socio-economic development trajectories. Here we show that the climatic impacts on land ecosystems drive significant feedbacks in energy, agriculture, land use and carbon cycle projections for the twenty-first century. We find that exposure of human-appropriated land ecosystem productivity to biospheric change results in reductions of land area used for crops; increases in managed forest area and carbon stocks; decreases in global crop prices; and reduction in fossil fuel emissions for a low-mid-range forcing scenario. The feedbacks between climate-induced biospheric change and human system forcings to the climate system - demonstrated here - are handled inconsistently, or excluded altogether, in the one-way asynchronous coupling of energy-economic models to ESMs used to date.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85021761062
U2 - 10.1038/nclimate3310
DO - 10.1038/nclimate3310
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85021761062
SN - 1758-678X
VL - 7
SP - 496
EP - 500
JO - Nature Climate Change
JF - Nature Climate Change
IS - 7
ER -