Assimilation of carbonyl sulfide

Modeling and predicting changes in the function and structure of the terrestrial biosphere and its feedbacks to climate change strongly depends on our ability to accurately represent interactions of the carbon and water cycles and energy exchange. However, carbon fluxes, hydrological status, and ene...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geoscientific model development 2024-08, Vol.17 (16), p.6337
Hauptverfasser: Zhu, Huajie, Wu, Mousong, Jiang, Fei, Vossbeck, Michael, Kaminski, Thomas, Xing, Xiuli, Wang, Jun, Ju, Weimin, Chen, Jing M
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container_end_page
container_issue 16
container_start_page 6337
container_title Geoscientific model development
container_volume 17
creator Zhu, Huajie
Wu, Mousong
Jiang, Fei
Vossbeck, Michael
Kaminski, Thomas
Xing, Xiuli
Wang, Jun
Ju, Weimin
Chen, Jing M
description Modeling and predicting changes in the function and structure of the terrestrial biosphere and its feedbacks to climate change strongly depends on our ability to accurately represent interactions of the carbon and water cycles and energy exchange. However, carbon fluxes, hydrological status, and energy exchange simulated by process-based terrestrial ecosystem models are subject to significant uncertainties, largely due to the poorly calibrated parameters. In this work, an adjoint-based data assimilation system (Nanjing University Carbon Assimilation System; NUCAS v1.0) was developed, which is capable of assimilating multiple observations to optimize process parameters of a satellite-data-driven ecosystem model - the Biosphere-atmosphere Exchange Process Simulator (BEPS). Data assimilation experiments were conducted to investigate the robustness of NUCAS and to test the feasibility and applicability of assimilating carbonyl sulfide (COS) fluxes from seven sites to enhance our understanding of stomatal conductance and photosynthesis. Results showed that NUCAS is able to achieve a consistent fit to COS observations across various ecosystems, including evergreen needleleaf forest, deciduous broadleaf forest, C.sub.3 grass, and C.sub.3 crop. Comparing model simulations with validation datasets, we found that assimilating COS fluxes notably improves the model performance in gross primary productivity and evapotranspiration, with average root-mean-square error (RMSE) reductions of 23.54 % and 16.96 %, respectively. We also showed that NUCAS is capable of constraining parameters through assimilating observations from two sites simultaneously and achieving a good consistency with single-site assimilation. Our results demonstrate that COS can provide constraints on parameters relevant to water, energy, and carbon processes with the data assimilation system and opens new perspectives for better understanding of the ecosystem carbon, water, and energy exchanges.
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subjects Analysis
Climatic changes
Energy trading
Sulfides
title Assimilation of carbonyl sulfide
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