Noah S. Diffenbaugh, Lisa C. Sloan, Mark A.
Snyder, Jason L. Bell, Jed O. Kaplan, Sarah L. Shafer and Patrick
J. Bartlein
Vegetation sensitivity to global anthropogenic
carbon dioxide emissions in a topographically complex region
Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 17(2),
1067, 10.1029/200GB001974, 2003.
Anthropogenic increases in atmospheric carbon
dioxide (CO2) concentrations may affect vegetation distribution
both directly through changes in photosynthesis and water-use
efficiency, and indirectly through CO2-induced climate change.
Using an equilibrium vegetation model (BIOME4) driven by a regional
climate model (RegCM2.5), we tested the sensitivity of vegetation
in the western United States, a topographically complex region,
to the direct, indirect, and combined effects of doubled preindustrial
atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Those sensitivities were quantified
using the kappa statistic. Simulated vegetation in the western
United States was sensitive to changes in atmospheric CO2 concentrations,
with woody biome types replacing less woody types throughout the
domain. The simulated vegetation was also sensitive to climatic
effects, particularly at high elevations, due to both warming
throughout the domain and decreased precipitation in key mountain
regions such as the Sierra Nevada of California and the Cascade
and Blue Mountains of Oregon. Significantly, when the direct effects
of CO2 on vegetation were tested in combination with the indirect
effects of CO2-induced climate change, new vegetation patterns
were created that were not seen in either of the individual cases.
This result indicates that climatic and nonclimatic effects must
be considered in tandem when assessing the potential impacts of
elevated CO2 levels.
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