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Variability of fire carbon emissions in equatorial Asia and its nonlinear sensitivity to El Niño

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journal contribution
posted on 2016-11-08, 15:05 authored by Y. Yin, P. Ciais, F. Chevallier, G. R. van der Werf, T. Fanin, G. Broquet, Hartmut Boesch, A. Cozic, D. Hauglustaine, S. Szopa, Y. Wang
The large peatland carbon stocks in the land use change-affected areas of equatorial Asia are vulnerable to fire. Combining satellite observations of active fire, burned area, and atmospheric concentrations of combustion tracers with a Bayesian inversion, we estimated the amount and variability of fire carbon emissions in equatorial Asia over the period 1997-2015. Emissions in 2015 were of 0.51±0.17Pg carbon-less than half of the emissions from the previous 1997 extreme El Niño, explained by a less acute water deficit. Fire severity could be empirically hindcasted from the cumulative water deficit with a lead time of 1 to 2months. Based on CMIP5 climate projections and an exponential empirical relationship found between fire carbon emissions and water deficit, we infer a total fire carbon loss ranging from 12 to 25Pg by 2100 which is a significant positive feedback to climate warming.

Funding

European Research Council Synergy. Grant Number: ERC-2013-SyG 610028

History

Citation

Geophysical Research Letters, 43, 10,472–10,479.

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Geophysical Research Letters

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU), Wiley

issn

0094-8276

eissn

1944-8007

Acceptance date

2016-09-21

Available date

2016-11-08

Publisher version

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/2016GL070971/abstract

Notes

This article was corrected on 2 NOV 2016. See the end of the full text for details.

Language

en

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