Published September 2022 | Published
Journal Article Open

Quantifying Northern High Latitude Gross Primary Productivity (GPP) Using Carbonyl Sulfide (OCS)

  • 1. ROR icon Jet Propulsion Lab
  • 2. ROR icon Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  • 3. ROR icon Colorado State University
  • 4. ROR icon University of California, Los Angeles
  • 5. ROR icon Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
  • 6. ROR icon Earth System Research Laboratory
  • 7. ROR icon Stanford University
  • 8. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

The northern high latitude (NHL, 40°N to 90°N) is where the second peak region of gross primary productivity (GPP) other than the tropics. The summer NHL GPP is about 80% of the tropical peak, but both regions are still highly uncertain (Norton et al. 2019, https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-16-3069-2019). Carbonyl sulfide (OCS) provides an important proxy for photosynthetic carbon uptake. Here we optimize the OCS plant uptake fluxes across the NHL by fitting atmospheric concentration simulation with the GEOS-CHEM global transport model to the aircraft profiles acquired over Alaska during NASA's Carbon in Arctic Reservoirs Vulnerability Experiment (2012–2015). We use the empirical biome-specific linear relationship between OCS plant uptake flux and GPP to derive the six plant uptake OCS fluxes from different GPP data. Such GPP-based fluxes are used to drive the concentration simulations. We evaluate the simulations against the independent observations at two ground sites of Alaska. The optimized OCS fluxes suggest the NHL plant uptake OCS flux of −247 Gg S year−1, about 25% stronger than the ensemble mean of the six GPP-based OCS fluxes. GPP-based OCS fluxes systematically underestimate the peak growing season across the NHL, while a subset of models predict early start of season in Alaska, consistent with previous studies of net ecosystem exchange. The OCS optimized GPP of 34 PgC yr−1 for NHL is also about 25% more than the ensembles mean from six GPP data. Further work is needed to fully understand the environmental and biotic drivers and quantify their rate of photosynthetic carbon uptake in Arctic ecosystems.

Copyright and License

This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non-commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.

Acknowledgement

This research was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). This study was funded by CARVE project. LK was also supported by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), United States (ECOSTRESS Science and Applications Team: Grant No. 80NSSC20K0215). SAM acknowledges the technical contributions and support of C. Siso, B. Miller, I. Vimont, A. Andrews, J. Higgs, S. Wolter, D. Neff, and other NOAA and CIRES colleagues that enabled the NOAA/GML sampling and sample analyses used in this study. MS carried this work with the support of the NASA Grant 80NSSC20K0215, and PNNL is operated by Battelle Memorial Institute for the U.S. DOE under contract DE-AC05-76RLO1830. The authors want to acknowledge the 2017 Keck Institute for Space Studies workshop “Next-Generation Approach for Detecting Climate-Carbon Feedbacks: Space-Based Integration of Carbonyl Sulfide (OCS), CO2, and Solar Induced Fluorescence (SIF)” and the helpful discussion during the workshop.

Contributions

Conceptualization: Le Kuai, Nicholas C. Parazoo, Charles E. Miller. Data curation: Charles E. Miller, Ian Baker, Anthony A. Bloom, Zhao-Cheng Zeng, Stephen A. Montzka, Joe Berry, Colm Sweeney, John B. Miller. Formal analysis: Le Kua.

Data Availability

CARVE observations for all the campaigns from 2012 to 2016 are archived at ORNL DAAC (https://daac.ornl.gov/cgi-bin/dataset_lister.pl?p=35). The ground-based OCS measurements at BRW and CRV are available at NOAA/GML website (https://gml.noaa.gov/dv/data/). The GPP data from all models, OCS fluxes and GEOS-CHEM model simulations are available upon request, and will be archived during the reviewing process.

Files

Global Biogeochemical Cycles - 2022 - Kuai - Quantifying Northern High Latitude Gross Primary Productivity GPP Using.pdf

Additional details

Created:
February 13, 2025
Modified:
February 13, 2025