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GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES,
VOL. 13, NO. 2,
PAGES 519–530,
1999
A Global Calculation of the δ13C of Soil Respired Carbon : Implications for the Biospheric Uptake of Anthropogenic CO2
P. Ciais
Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement, CEA, Gif-sur-Yvette, Fran
P. Friedlingstein
Goddard Institute for Space Studies, National Aeronautics and Space Administration, New Yo
D. S. Schimel
National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colora
P. P. Tans
Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, Boulder, Colora
Abstract
The continuing emissions of fossil CO2 depleted in 13C have been causing a gradual decrease in atmospheric δ13C by roughly 1.4‰ since preindustrial times. The progressive penetration of this perturbation into the land biota causes
the soil organic matter to be enriched in 13C with respect to recently formed plant material. This effect which we call the "biotic isotope disequilibrium" is
important when it comes to deducing the terrestrial carbon fluxes by using δ13C in atmospheric CO2. We have estimated the geographical distribution of the isotopic disequilibrium, which is primarily influenced by
the turnover of carbon in the various ecosystems, from the output of two biospheric models, (SLAVE and CENTURY). The
disequilibrium is estimated to shift up the δ13C of atmospheric CO2 by the same amount as a net sink of 0.6 Gt C yr−1 in the land biota. This “fake” terrestrial sink due to the isotopic disequilibrium is distributed mainly in northern
midlatitudes (0.2 Gt C yr−1) and tropical forests (0.3 Gt C yr−1).
Received 10
July
1996;
accepted 29
December
1997.
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Citation: Ciais, P., P. Friedlingstein, D. S. Schimel, and P. P. Tans
(1999),
A Global Calculation of the δ13C of Soil Respired Carbon : Implications for the Biospheric Uptake of Anthropogenic CO2,
Global Biogeochem. Cycles,
13(2),
519–530.
Copyright 1999 by the American Geophysical Union.
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