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. 2003 Jun 6;300(5625):1538-42.
doi: 10.1126/science.1083592. Epub 2003 May 22.

Europe's terrestrial biosphere absorbs 7 to 12% of European anthropogenic CO2 emissions

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Europe's terrestrial biosphere absorbs 7 to 12% of European anthropogenic CO2 emissions

Ivan A Janssens et al. Science. .

Abstract

Most inverse atmospheric models report considerable uptake of carbon dioxide in Europe's terrestrial biosphere. In contrast, carbon stocks in terrestrial ecosystems increase at a much smaller rate, with carbon gains in forests and grassland soils almost being offset by carbon losses from cropland and peat soils. Accounting for non-carbon dioxide carbon transfers that are not detected by the atmospheric models and for carbon dioxide fluxes bypassing the ecosystem carbon stocks considerably reduces the gap between the small carbon-stock changes and the larger carbon dioxide uptake estimated by atmospheric models. The remaining difference could be because of missing components in the stock-change approach, as well as the large uncertainty in both methods. With the use of the corrected atmosphere- and land-based estimates as a dual constraint, we estimate a net carbon sink between 135 and 205 teragrams per year in Europe's terrestrial biosphere, the equivalent of 7 to 12% of the 1995 anthropogenic carbon emissions.

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Comment in

  • The European carbon budget: a gap.
    Siemens J. Siemens J. Science. 2003 Dec 5;302(5651):1681; author reply 1681. doi: 10.1126/science.302.5651.1681b. Science. 2003. PMID: 14657477 No abstract available.

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