Novel applications of carbon isotopes in atmospheric CO2: What can atmospheric measurements teach us about processes in the biosphere?

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Abstract

Conventionally, measurements of carbon isotopes in atmospheric CO 2 (δ 13CO 2) have been used to partition fluxes between terrestrial and ocean carbon pools. However, novel analytical approaches combined with an increase in the spatial extent and frequency of δ 13CO 2 measurements allow us to conduct a global analysis of δ 13CO 2 variability to infer the isotopic composition of source CO 2 to the atmosphere (δ s). This global analysis yields coherent seasonal patterns of isotopic enrichment. Our results indicate that seasonal values of δ s are more highly correlated with vapor pressure deficit (r = 0.404) than relative humidity (r = 0.149). We then evaluate two widely used stomatal conductance models and determine that the Leuning Model, which is primarily driven by vapor pressure deficit is more effective globally at predicting δ s (RMSE = 1.6‰) than the Ball-Woodrow-Berry model, which is driven by relative humidity (RMSE = 2.7‰). Thus stomatal conductance on a global scale may be more sensitive to changes in vapor pressure deficit than relative humidity. This approach highlights a new application of using δ 13CO 2 measurements to validate global models. © Author(s) 2011.

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APA

Ballantyne, A. P., Miller, J. B., Baker, I. T., Tans, P. P., & White, J. W. C. (2011). Novel applications of carbon isotopes in atmospheric CO2: What can atmospheric measurements teach us about processes in the biosphere? Biogeosciences, 8(10), 3093–3106. https://doi.org/10.5194/bg-8-3093-2011

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