Authors
Stephen W Pacala, George C Hurtt, David Baker, Philippe Peylin, Richard A Houghton, Richard A Birdsey, Linda Heath, Eric T Sundquist, RF Stallard, Philippe Ciais, Paul Moorcroft, John P Caspersen, Elena Shevliakova, Berrien Moore, Gundolf Kohlmaier, Elisabeth Holland, M Gloor, Mark E Harmon, S-M Fan, Jorge L Sarmiento, Christine L Goodale, David Schimel, CB Field
Publication date
2001/6/22
Journal
Science
Volume
292
Issue
5525
Pages
2316-2320
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
For the period 1980–89, we estimate a carbon sink in the coterminous United States between 0.30 and 0.58 petagrams of carbon per year (petagrams of carbon = 1015 grams of carbon). The net carbon flux from the atmosphere to the land was higher, 0.37 to 0.71 petagrams of carbon per year, because a net flux of 0.07 to 0.13 petagrams of carbon per year was exported by rivers and commerce and returned to the atmosphere elsewhere. These land-based estimates are larger than those from previous studies (0.08 to 0.35 petagrams of carbon per year) because of the inclusion of additional processes and revised estimates of some component fluxes. Although component estimates are uncertain, about one-half of the total is outside the forest sector. We also estimated the sink using atmospheric models and the atmospheric concentration of carbon dioxide (the tracer-transport inversion method). The range of results …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
SW Pacala, GC Hurtt, D Baker, P Peylin, RA Houghton… - Science, 2001