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The North American Carbon Program Multi-Scale Synthesis and Terrestrial Model Intercomparison Project – Part 1: Overview and Experimental Design
Geoscientific Model Development (2013)
  • D. N. Huntzinger, Northern Arizona University
  • C. Schwalm, Northern Arizona University
  • A, M, Michalak
  • K. Schaefer, University of Colorado Boulder
  • A. W. King, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • Y. Wei, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • A. Jacobson
  • S. Liu, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • R. B. Cook, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • W. M. Post, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • G. Berthier
  • D Hayes, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • M. Huang
  • A. Ito
  • H. Lei
  • Chaoqun (Crystal) Lu, Auburn University Main Campus
  • J. Mao, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • C. H. Peng, University of Quebec at Montreal
  • S. Peng
  • B. Poulter
  • D. Ricciuto, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • X. Shi, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
  • Hanqin Tian, Auburn University Main Campus
  • W. Wang
  • N. Zeng, University of Maryland - College Park
  • F. Zhao, University of Maryland - College Park
  • Q. Zhu
Abstract

Terrestrial biosphere models (TBMs) have become an integral tool for extrapolating local observations and understanding of land–atmosphere carbon exchange to larger regions. The North American Carbon Program (NACP) Multi-scale synthesis and Terrestrial Model Intercomparison Project (MsTMIP) is a formal model intercomparison and evaluation effort focused on improving the diagnosis and attribution of carbon exchange at regional and global scales. MsTMIP builds upon current and past synthesis activities, and has a unique framework designed to isolate, interpret, and inform understanding of how model structural differences impact estimates of carbon uptake and release. Here we provide an overview of the MsTMIP effort and describe how the MsTMIP experimental design enables the assessment and quantification of TBM structural uncertainty. Model structure refers to the types of processes considered (e.g., nutrient cycling, disturbance, lateral transport of carbon), and how these processes are represented (e.g., photosynthetic formulation, temperature sensitivity, respiration) in the models. By prescribing a common experimental protocol with standard spin-up procedures and driver data sets, we isolate any biases and variability in TBM estimates of regional and global carbon budgets resulting from differences in the models themselves (i.e., model structure) and model-specific parameter values. An initial intercomparison of model structural differences is represented using hierarchical cluster diagrams (a.k.a. dendrograms), which highlight similarities and differences in how models account for carbon cycle, vegetation, energy, and nitrogen cycle dynamics. We show that, despite the standardized protocol used to derive initial conditions, models show a high degree of variation for GPP, total living biomass, and total soil carbon, underscoring the influence of differences in model structure and parameterization on model estimates.

Publication Date
December, 2013
Publisher Statement
Works produced by employees of the U.S. Government as part of their official duties are not copyrighted within the U.S. The content of this document is not copyrighted.
Citation Information
D. N. Huntzinger, C. Schwalm, A, M, Michalak, K. Schaefer, et al.. "The North American Carbon Program Multi-Scale Synthesis and Terrestrial Model Intercomparison Project – Part 1: Overview and Experimental Design" Geoscientific Model Development Vol. 6 Iss. 6 (2013)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/chaoqun_lu/26/