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Projeto de investigação
IMPACTOS DAS ALTERAÇÕES CLIMÁTICAS NA DINÂMICA DA VEGETAÇÃO E NO CICLO DE CARBONO NA REGIÃO EURO-ASIÁTICA
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Impacts of climate variability and extremes on carbon uptake by land ecosystems
Publication . Bastos, Ana Filipa Ferreira, 1986-; Trigo, Ricardo M., 1967-; Gouveia, Célia Marina Pedroso, 1970-
Global land ecosystems are particularly important in the regulation of
the atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) balance, removing every year about
one quarter of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. Although the oceans constitute
a CO2 sink of approximately the same magnitude, most of the inter-annual
variability observed in atmospheric CO2 growth rates is due to variability in
the land-sink.
While the patterns governing variability of vegetation CO2 exchange at
the sub-seasonal to seasonal time scales are relatively well understood, large
uncertainties remain about the dynamics and drivers of CO2 uptake by
ecosystems at continental to global scale, and on time-scales from annual
to decadal. This is partly due to the complexity of the interactions between
the different processes that regulate CO2 exchange ar the ecosystem level
and their physical drivers, as well as to the presence of natural variability in
the climate system.
In this context, understanding the link between the main modes of coupled
atmospheric-ocean circulation and CO2 uptake by ecosystems, as well
as the way ecosystems respond to extreme events, is particularly relevant.
This Thesis analyses in detail the influence of the El-Niño/Southern Oscillation
on the global land-sink and explores the relationship between the
European sink and the main large-scale atmospheric circulation patterns in
the North-Atlantic sector, in particular the North-Atlantic Oscillation and
the East-Atlantic pattern. Furthermore, this work performs a comparative
study of the two most outstanding extreme events affecting Europe in the
past century - the 2003 heatwave over western Europe, and the 2010 event
over western Russia.
The results highlight the potential of analyzing ecological variability in
the framework of climate variability patterns, which may help to better interpret
past and present trends in the land-sink and pave the way to better
constrain future projections in Earth-System models.
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Entidade financiadora
Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
Programa de financiamento
Número da atribuição
SFRH/BD/78068/2011
