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Featured researches published by P. Bousquet.


Nature | 2001

Recent patterns and mechanisms of carbon exchange by terrestrial ecosystems

David S. Schimel; Joanna Isobel House; K. Hibbard; P. Bousquet; Philippe Ciais; Philippe Peylin; Bobby H. Braswell; Mike Apps; D. F. Baker; Alberte Bondeau; Josep G. Canadell; Galina Churkina; Wolfgang Cramer; A. S. Denning; Christopher B. Field; Pierre Friedlingstein; Christine L. Goodale; Martin Heimann; R. A. Houghton; Jerry M. Melillo; Berrien Moore; Daniel Murdiyarso; Ian R. Noble; Stephen W. Pacala; I. C. Prentice; M. R. Raupach; P. J. Rayner; Robert J. Scholes; Will Steffen; Christian Wirth

Knowledge of carbon exchange between the atmosphere, land and the oceans is important, given that the terrestrial and marine environments are currently absorbing about half of the carbon dioxide that is emitted by fossil-fuel combustion. This carbon uptake is therefore limiting the extent of atmospheric and climatic change, but its long-term nature remains uncertain. Here we provide an overview of the current state of knowledge of global and regional patterns of carbon exchange by terrestrial ecosystems. Atmospheric carbon dioxide and oxygen data confirm that the terrestrial biosphere was largely neutral with respect to net carbon exchange during the 1980s, but became a net carbon sink in the 1990s. This recent sink can be largely attributed to northern extratropical areas, and is roughly split between North America and Eurasia. Tropical land areas, however, were approximately in balance with respect to carbon exchange, implying a carbon sink that offset emissions due to tropical deforestation. The evolution of the terrestrial carbon sink is largely the result of changes in land use over time, such as regrowth on abandoned agricultural land and fire prevention, in addition to responses to environmental changes, such as longer growing seasons, and fertilization by carbon dioxide and nitrogen. Nevertheless, there remain considerable uncertainties as to the magnitude of the sink in different regions and the contribution of different processes.


Nature | 2006

Contribution of anthropogenic and natural sources to atmospheric methane variability

P. Bousquet; Philippe Ciais; J. B. Miller; E. J. Dlugokencky; D. A. Hauglustaine; C. Prigent; G. R. van der Werf; P. Peylin; E.-G. Brunke; C. Carouge; R. L. Langenfelds; J. Lathière; Fabrice Papa; M. Ramonet; M. Schmidt; L. P. Steele; S. C. Tyler; James W. C. White

Methane is an important greenhouse gas, and its atmospheric concentration has nearly tripled since pre-industrial times. The growth rate of atmospheric methane is determined by the balance between surface emissions and photochemical destruction by the hydroxyl radical, the major atmospheric oxidant. Remarkably, this growth rate has decreased markedly since the early 1990s, and the level of methane has remained relatively constant since 1999, leading to a downward revision of its projected influence on global temperatures. Large fluctuations in the growth rate of atmospheric methane are also observed from one year to the next, but their causes remain uncertain. Here we quantify the processes that controlled variations in methane emissions between 1984 and 2003 using an inversion model of atmospheric transport and chemistry. Our results indicate that wetland emissions dominated the inter-annual variability of methane sources, whereas fire emissions played a smaller role, except during the 1997–1998 El Niño event. These top-down estimates of changes in wetland and fire emissions are in good agreement with independent estimates based on remote sensing information and biogeochemical models. On longer timescales, our results show that the decrease in atmospheric methane growth during the 1990s was caused by a decline in anthropogenic emissions. Since 1999, however, they indicate that anthropogenic emissions of methane have risen again. The effect of this increase on the growth rate of atmospheric methane has been masked by a coincident decrease in wetland emissions, but atmospheric methane levels may increase in the near future if wetland emissions return to their mean 1990s levels.


Nature Geoscience | 2013

Three decades of global methane sources and sinks

Stefanie Kirschke; P. Bousquet; Philippe Ciais; Marielle Saunois; Josep G. Canadell; E. J. Dlugokencky; P. Bergamaschi; D. Bergmann; D. R. Blake; Lori Bruhwiler; Philip Cameron-Smith; Simona Castaldi; F. Chevallier; Liang Feng; A. Fraser; Martin Heimann; E. L. Hodson; Sander Houweling; B. Josse; P. J. Fraser; P. B. Krummel; Jean-Francois Lamarque; R. L. Langenfelds; Corinne Le Quéré; Vaishali Naik; Simon O'Doherty; Paul I. Palmer; I. Pison; David A. Plummer; Benjamin Poulter

Methane is an important greenhouse gas, responsible for about 20% of the warming induced by long-lived greenhouse gases since pre-industrial times. By reacting with hydroxyl radicals, methane reduces the oxidizing capacity of the atmosphere and generates ozone in the troposphere. Although most sources and sinks of methane have been identified, their relative contributions to atmospheric methane levels are highly uncertain. As such, the factors responsible for the observed stabilization of atmospheric methane levels in the early 2000s, and the renewed rise after 2006, remain unclear. Here, we construct decadal budgets for methane sources and sinks between 1980 and 2010, using a combination of atmospheric measurements and results from chemical transport models, ecosystem models, climate chemistry models and inventories of anthropogenic emissions. The resultant budgets suggest that data-driven approaches and ecosystem models overestimate total natural emissions. We build three contrasting emission scenarios-which differ in fossil fuel and microbial emissions-to explain the decadal variability in atmospheric methane levels detected, here and in previous studies, since 1985. Although uncertainties in emission trends do not allow definitive conclusions to be drawn, we show that the observed stabilization of methane levels between 1999 and 2006 can potentially be explained by decreasing-to-stable fossil fuel emissions, combined with stable-to-increasing microbial emissions. We show that a rise in natural wetland emissions and fossil fuel emissions probably accounts for the renewed increase in global methane levels after 2006, although the relative contribution of these two sources remains uncertain.


Science | 2007

Weak Northern and Strong Tropical Land Carbon Uptake from Vertical Profiles of Atmospheric CO2

Britton B. Stephens; Kevin Robert Gurney; Pieter P. Tans; Colm Sweeney; Wouter Peters; Lori Bruhwiler; Philippe Ciais; Michel Ramonet; P. Bousquet; Takakiyo Nakazawa; Shuji Aoki; Toshinobu Machida; Gen Inoue; Nikolay Vinnichenko; Jon Lloyd; Armin Jordan; Martin Heimann; Olga Shibistova; R. L. Langenfelds; L. Paul Steele; R. J. Francey; A. Scott Denning

Measurements of midday vertical atmospheric CO2 distributions reveal annual-mean vertical CO2 gradients that are inconsistent with atmospheric models that estimate a large transfer of terrestrial carbon from tropical to northern latitudes. The three models that most closely reproduce the observed annual-mean vertical CO2 gradients estimate weaker northern uptake of –1.5 petagrams of carbon per year (Pg C year–1) and weaker tropical emission of +0.1 Pg C year–1 compared with previous consensus estimates of –2.4 and +1.8 Pg C year–1, respectively. This suggests that northern terrestrial uptake of industrial CO2 emissions plays a smaller role than previously thought and that, after subtracting land-use emissions, tropical ecosystems may currently be strong sinks for CO2.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2004

Transcom 3 inversion intercomparison: Model mean results for the estimation of seasonal carbon sources and sinks

Kevin Robert Gurney; R. M. Law; A. Scott Denning; P. J. Rayner; Bernard Pak; D. F. Baker; P. Bousquet; Lori Bruhwiler; Yu Han Chen; Philippe Ciais; Inez Y. Fung; Martin Heimann; Jasmin G. John; Takashi Maki; Shamil Maksyutov; Philippe Peylin; Michael J. Prather; Shoichi Taguchi

[1] The TransCom 3 experiment was begun to explore the estimation of carbon sources and sinks via the inversion of simulated tracer transport. We build upon previous TransCom work by presenting the seasonal inverse results which provide estimates of carbon flux for 11 land and 11 ocean regions using 12 atmospheric transport models. The monthly fluxes represent the mean seasonal cycle for the 1992 to 1996 time period. The spread among the model results is larger than the average of their estimated flux uncertainty in the northern extratropics and vice versa in the tropical regions. In the northern land regions, the model spread is largest during the growing season. Compared to a seasonally balanced biosphere prior flux generated by the CASA model, we find significant changes to the carbon exchange in the European region with greater growing season net uptake which persists into the fall months. Both Boreal North America and Boreal Asia show lessened net uptake at the onset of the growing season with Boreal Asia also exhibiting greater peak growing season net uptake. Temperate Asia shows a dramatic springward shift in the peak timing of growing season net uptake relative to the neutral CASA flux while Temperate North America exhibits a broad flattening of the seasonal cycle. In most of the ocean regions, the inverse fluxes exhibit much greater seasonality than that implied by the DpCO2 derived fluxes though this may be due, in part, to misallocation of adjacent land flux. In the Southern Ocean, the austral spring and fall exhibits much less carbon uptake than implied by DpCO2 derived fluxes. Sensitivity testing indicates that the inverse estimates are not overly influenced by the prior flux choices. Considerable agreement exists between the model mean, annual mean results of this study and that of the previously published TransCom annual mean inversion. The differences that do exist are in poorly constrained regions and tend to exhibit compensatory fluxes in order to match the global mass constraint. The differences between the estimated fluxes and the prior model over the northern land regions could be due to the prior model respiration response to temperature. Significant phase differences, such as that in the Temperate Asia region, may be due to the limited observations for that region. Finally, differences in the boreal land regions between the prior model and the estimated fluxes may be a reflection of the timing of spring thaw and an imbalance in respiration versus photosynthesis. INDEX TERMS: 0322 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Constituent sources and sinks; 1615 Global Change: Biogeochemical processes (4805); 0315 Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Biosphere/atmosphere interactions; KEYWORDS: carbon transport, inversion


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1998

Satellite climatology of African dust transport in the Mediterranean atmosphere

Cyril Moulin; Claude Lambert; U. Dayan; V. Masson; M. Ramonet; P. Bousquet; Michel Legrand; Y. J. Balkanski; W. Guelle; B. Marticorena; G. Bergametti; François Dulac

A daily analysis of African dust concentrations in the Mediterranean atmosphere has been made between June 1983 and December 1994 using the International Satellite Cloud Climatology Project (ISCCP-B2) archive of Meteosat visible (VIS) channel images. The ISCCP-B2 archive of Meteosat infrared (IR) images has also been used to determine the frequencies of dust mobilization over the continent, north of 30°N. Despite a large daily variability, climatological results show a clear seasonal cycle with a maximum during the dry season: dust transport begins over the eastern basin in spring and spreads over the western basin in summer. These patterns are shown to be related to both cyclogenesis over North Africa and rainfall over the Mediterranean Sea. Indeed, the frequency of dust mobilization over the continent and of dust outbreaks over the sea are strongly related to the climatology of depressions affecting North Africa. Precipitations appear to be an important factor explaining both the seasonal east-west shift in transport location and the south-north gradients of dust concentrations over the Mediterranean.


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2008

TransCom model simulations of hourly atmospheric CO2: Analysis of synoptic-scale variations for the period 2002-2003

Prabir K. Patra; R. M. Law; Wouter Peters; Christian Rödenbeck; Masayuki Takigawa; C. Aulagnier; Ian T. Baker; D. Bergmann; P. Bousquet; Jørgen Brandt; L. M. P. Bruhwiler; Philip Cameron-Smith; Jesper Christensen; F. Delage; A. S. Denning; S. Fan; Camilla Geels; Sander Houweling; Ryoichi Imasu; Ute Karstens; S. R. Kawa; J. Kleist; M. Krol; S.-J. Lin; R. Lokupitiya; Takashi Maki; Shamil Maksyutov; Yosuke Niwa; R. Onishi; N. Parazoo

The ability to reliably estimate CO2 fluxes from current in situ atmospheric CO2 measurements and future satellite CO2 measurements is dependent on transport model performance at synoptic and shorter timescales. The TransCom continuous experiment was designed to evaluate the performance of forward transport model simulations at hourly, daily, and synoptic timescales, and we focus on the latter two in this paper. Twenty-five transport models or model variants submitted hourly time series of nine predetermined tracers (seven for CO2) at 280 locations. We extracted synoptic-scale variability from daily averaged CO2 time series using a digital filter and analyzed the results by comparing them to atmospheric measurements at 35 locations. The correlations between modeled and observed synoptic CO2 variabilities were almost always largest with zero time lag and statistically significant for most models and most locations. Generally, the model results using diurnally varying land fluxes were closer to the observations compared to those obtained using monthly mean or daily average fluxes, and winter was often better simulated than summer. Model results at higher spatial resolution compared better with observations, mostly because these models were able to sample closer to the measurement site location. The amplitude and correlation of model-data variability is strongly model and season dependent. Overall similarity in modeled synoptic CO2 variability suggests that the first-order transport mechanisms are fairly well parameterized in the models, and no clear distinction was found between the meteorological analyses in capturing the synoptic-scale dynamics.


Science | 2014

Methane on the Rise—Again

Euan G. Nisbet; E. J. Dlugokencky; P. Bousquet

Atmospheric concentrations of the greenhouse gas methane are rising, but the reasons remain incompletely understood. Roughly one-fifth of the increase in radiative forcing by human-linked greenhouse gases since 1750 is due to methane. The past three decades have seen prolonged periods of increasing atmospheric methane, but the growth rate slowed in the 1990s (1), and from 1999 to 2006, the methane burden (that is, the total amount of methane in the air) was nearly constant. Yet strong growth resumed in 2007. The reasons for these observed changes remain poorly understood because of limited knowledge of what controls the global methane budget (2).


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

CO2 surface fluxes at grid point scale estimated from a global 21 year reanalysis of atmospheric measurements

F. Chevallier; Philippe Ciais; T. J. Conway; Tuula Aalto; Bruce E. Anderson; P. Bousquet; E.-G. Brunke; L. Ciattaglia; Y. Esaki; M. Fröhlich; Antony Gomez; A. J. Gomez-Pelaez; L. Haszpra; P. B. Krummel; R. L. Langenfelds; Markus Leuenberger; Toshinobu Machida; Fabienne Maignan; Hidekazu Matsueda; J. A. Morguí; Hitoshi Mukai; Takakiyo Nakazawa; Philippe Peylin; M. Ramonet; L. Rivier; Yousuke Sawa; Martina Schmidt; L. P. Steele; S. A. Vay; Alex Vermeulen

This paper documents a global Bayesian variational inversion of CO2 surface fluxes during the period 1988-2008. Weekly fluxes are estimated on a 3.75 degrees x 2.5 degrees (longitude-latitude) grid throughout the 21 years. The assimilated observations include 128 station records from three large data sets of surface CO2 mixing ratio measurements. A Monte Carlo approach rigorously quantifies the theoretical uncertainty of the inverted fluxes at various space and time scales, which is particularly important for proper interpretation of the inverted fluxes. Fluxes are evaluated indirectly against two independent CO2 vertical profile data sets constructed from aircraft measurements in the boundary layer and in the free troposphere. The skill of the inversion is evaluated by the improvement brought over a simple benchmark flux estimation based on the observed atmospheric growth rate. Our error analysis indicates that the carbon budget from the inversion should be more accurate than the a priori carbon budget by 20% to 60% for terrestrial fluxes aggregated at the scale of subcontinental regions in the Northern Hemisphere and over a year, but the inversion cannot clearly distinguish between the regional carbon budgets within a continent. On the basis of the independent observations, the inversion is seen to improve the fluxes compared to the benchmark: the atmospheric simulation of CO2 with the Bayesian inversion method is better by about 1 ppm than the benchmark in the free troposphere, despite possible systematic transport errors. The inversion achieves this improvement by changing the regional fluxes over land at the seasonal and at the interannual time scales. (Less)


Global Biogeochemical Cycles | 2008

TransCom model simulations of hourly atmospheric CO2 : experimental overview and diurnal cycle results for 2002

R. M. Law; Wouter Peters; Christian Rödenbeck; C. Aulagnier; Ian T. Baker; D. Bergmann; P. Bousquet; Jørgen Brandt; L. M. P. Bruhwiler; Philip Cameron-Smith; Jesper Christensen; F. Delage; A. S. Denning; S. Fan; Camilla Geels; Sander Houweling; Ryoichi Imasu; Ute Karstens; S. R. Kawa; J. Kleist; M. Krol; S.-J. Lin; R. Lokupitiya; Takashi Maki; Shamil Maksyutov; Yosuke Niwa; R. Onishi; N. Parazoo; Prabir K. Patra; G. Pieterse

[1] A forward atmospheric transport modeling experiment has been coordinated by the TransCom group to investigate synoptic and diurnal variations in CO2. Model simulations were run for biospheric, fossil, and air-sea exchange of CO2 and for SF6 and radon for 2000-2003. Twenty-five models or model variants participated in the comparison. Hourly concentration time series were submitted for 280 sites along with vertical profiles, fluxes, and meteorological variables at 100 sites. The submitted results have been analyzed for diurnal variations and are compared with observed CO2 in 2002. Mean summer diurnal cycles vary widely in amplitude across models. The choice of sampling location and model level account for part of the spread suggesting that representation errors in these types of models are potentially large. Despite the model spread, most models simulate the relative variation in diurnal amplitude between sites reasonably well. The modeled diurnal amplitude only shows a weak relationship with vertical resolution across models; differences in near-surface transport simulation appear to play a major role. Examples are also presented where there is evidence that the models show useful skill in simulating seasonal and synoptic changes in diurnal amplitude.

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F. Chevallier

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Philippe Ciais

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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I. Pison

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marielle Saunois

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Prabir K. Patra

Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology

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Shamil Maksyutov

National Institute for Environmental Studies

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A. Fortems-Cheiney

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Philippe Peylin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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