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Author
Aranda-Barranco, Sergio 1 Arriga, Nicola 1 Brümmer, Christian 1 Ceschia, Eric 1 Ciais, Philippe 1 Desai, Ankur R 1 Di Lonardo, Sara 1 Gharun, Mana 1 Graf, Alexander 1 Grünwald, Thomas 1 Hörtnagl, Lukas 1 Kasak, Kuno 1 Klosterhalfen, Anne 1 Knohl, Alexander 1 Kowalska, Natalia 1 Leuchner, Michael 1 Lindroth, Anders 1 Mauder, Matthias 1 Migliavacca, Mirco 1 Morel, Alexandra C 1
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Workplace
A N Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolu... 1 Andalusian Institute for Earth System Resear... 1 Bioclimatology University of Göttingen Götti... 1 CESBIO Université de Toulouse CNES CNRS INRA... 1 Departament of Ecology University of Granada... 1 Department Computational Hydrosystems Helmho... 1 Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Scienc... 1 Department of Chemical Engineering Universit... 1 Department of Environmental Systems Science ... 1 Department of Geography University of Tartu ... 1 Department of Natural Sciences Macquarie Uni... 1 Department of Physical Geography and Ecosyst... 1 Division of Energy Environment and Society U... 1 Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Department Ce... 1 European Commission Joint Research Centre Is... 1 Faculty of Agricultural Environmental and Fo... 1 Global Change Research Institute CAS Bělidla... 1 Institute of Bio and Geosciences Agrosphere ... 1 Institute of Bio and Geosciences Plant Scien... 1 Institute of Landscape Ecology University of... 1
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Most cited article - PubMed ID 38665193
Joint optimization of land carbon uptake and albedo can help achieve moderate instantaneous and long-term cooling effects
PubMed
38665193
PubMed Central
PMC11041785
DOI
10.1038/s43247-023-00958-4
PII: 958
Knihovny.cz E-resources
Both carbon dioxide uptake and albedo of the land surface affect global climate. However, climate change mitigation by increasing carbon uptake can cause a warming trade-off by decreasing albedo, with most research focusing on afforestation and its interaction with snow. Here, we present carbon uptake and albedo observations from 176 globally distributed flux stations. We demonstrate a gradual decline in maximum achievable annual albedo as carbon uptake increases, even within subgroups of non-forest and snow-free ecosystems. Based on a paired-site permutation approach, we quantify the likely impact of land use on carbon uptake and albedo. Shifting to the maximum attainable carbon uptake at each site would likely cause moderate net global warming for the first approximately 20 years, followed by a strong cooling effect. A balanced policy co-optimizing carbon uptake and albedo is possible that avoids warming on any timescale, but results in a weaker long-term cooling effect.
- Keywords
- Carbon cycle, Climate-change mitigation,
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- Journal Article MeSH
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