Publication | Open Access
Interannual variability of the global carbon cycle (1992–2005) inferred by inversion of atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub> and <i>δ</i><sup>13</sup>CO<sub>2</sub> measurements
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Citations
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References
2008
Year
ClimatologyAtmospheric Co 2Carbon SequestrationGlobal Carbon CycleEngineeringEnvironmental CycleAtmospheric InversionsInterannual VariabilityCo 2Greenhouse Gas SequestrationCarbon SinkGreenhouse Gas MeasurementEarth System ScienceCarbon CycleEmissionsEarth ScienceEarth's ClimateClimate Dynamics
We present estimates of the surface sources and sinks of CO 2 for 1992–2005 deduced from atmospheric inversions. We use atmospheric CO 2 records from 67 sites and 10 δ 13 CO 2 records. We use two atmospheric models to increase the robustness of the results. The results suggest that interannual variability is dominated by the tropical land. Statistically significant variability in the tropical Pacific supports recent ocean modeling studies in that region. The northern land also shows significant variability. In particular, there is a large positive anomaly in 2003 in north Asia, which we associate with anomalous biomass burning. Results using δ 13 CO 2 and CO 2 are statistically consistent with those using only CO 2 , suggesting that it is valid to use both types of data together. An objective analysis of residuals suggests that our treatment of uncertainties in CO 2 is conservative, while those for δ 13 CO 2 are optimistic, highlighting problems in our simple isotope model. Finally, δ 13 CO 2 measurements offer a good constraint to nearby land regions, suggesting an ongoing value in these measurements for studies of interannual variability.
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