Biophysical impacts of northern vegetation changes on seasonal warming patterns

Authors
Lian, XuJeong, SujongPark, Chang-EuiXu, HaoLi, Laurent Z. X.Wang, TaoGentine, PierrePenuelas, JosepPiao, Shilong
Issue Date
2022-07
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Nature Communications, v.13, no.1
Abstract
The seasonal greening of Northern Hemisphere (NH) ecosystems, due to extended growing periods and enhanced photosynthetic activity, could modify near-surface warming by perturbing land-atmosphere energy exchanges, yet this biophysical control on warming seasonality is underexplored. By performing experiments with a coupled land-atmosphere model, here we show that summer greening effectively dampens NH warming by -0.15 +/- 0.03 degrees C for 1982-2014 due to enhanced evapotranspiration. However, greening generates weak temperature changes in spring (+0.02 +/- 0.06 degrees C) and autumn (-0.05 +/- 0.05 degrees C), because the evaporative cooling is counterbalanced by radiative warming from albedo and water vapor feedbacks. The dwindling evaporative cooling towards cool seasons is also supported by state-of-the-art Earth system models. Moreover, greening-triggered energy imbalance is propagated forward by atmospheric circulation to subsequent seasons and causes sizable time-lagged climate effects. Overall, greening makes winter warmer and summer cooler, attenuating the seasonal amplitude of NH temperature. These findings demonstrate complex tradeoffs and linkages of vegetation-climate feedbacks among seasons. The seasonal greening of Northern Hemisphere ecosystems due to extended growing periods and enhanced photosynthetic activity is, via experiments, shown to modify near-surface warming by perturbing land-atmosphere energy exchanges.
Keywords
SNOW-ALBEDO FEEDBACK; EARTH SYSTEM MODEL; CLIMATE-CHANGE; TEMPERATURE RESPONSE; SURFACE-TEMPERATURE; DECIDUOUS FOREST; PHENOLOGY; CYCLE; CMIP5; DEFORESTATION
ISSN
2041-1723
URI
https://pubs.kist.re.kr/handle/201004/114892
DOI
10.1038/s41467-022-31671-z
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KIST Article > 2022
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