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Featured researches published by Zhenzhong Zeng.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Afforestation in China cools local land surface temperature

Shushi Peng; Shilong Piao; Zhenzhong Zeng; Philippe Ciais; Liming Zhou; Laurent Li; Ranga B. Myneni; Yi Yin; Hui Zeng

Significance China has the largest afforested area in the world. Afforestation not only contributes to increased carbon storage but also alters local albedo and turbulent energy fluxes, which offers feedback on the local and regional climate. This study presents previously unidentified observational evidence of the effect of large-scale afforestation on land surface temperature (LST) in China. Afforestation decreases daytime LST, because of enhanced evapotranspiration, and increases nighttime LST. This nighttime warming tends to offset daytime cooling in dry regions. These results suggest it is necessary to carefully consider where to plant trees to achieve potential climatic benefits in future afforestation projects. China has the largest afforested area in the world (∼62 million hectares in 2008), and these forests are carbon sinks. The climatic effect of these new forests depends on how radiant and turbulent energy fluxes over these plantations modify surface temperature. For instance, a lower albedo may cause warming, which negates the climatic benefits of carbon sequestration. Here, we used satellite measurements of land surface temperature (LST) from planted forests and adjacent grasslands or croplands in China to understand how afforestation affects LST. Afforestation is found to decrease daytime LST by about 1.1 ± 0.5 °C (mean ± 1 SD) and to increase nighttime LST by about 0.2 ± 0.5 °C, on average. The observed daytime cooling is a result of increased evapotranspiration. The nighttime warming is found to increase with latitude and decrease with average rainfall. Afforestation in dry regions therefore leads to net warming, as daytime cooling is offset by nighttime warming. Thus, it is necessary to carefully consider where to plant trees to realize potential climatic benefits in future afforestation projects.


Nature | 2015

Declining global warming effects on the phenology of spring leaf unfolding

Yongshuo H. Fu; Hongfang Zhao; Shilong Piao; Marc Peaucelle; Shushi Peng; Guiyun Zhou; Philippe Ciais; Mengtian Huang; Annette Menzel; Josep Peñuelas; Yang Song; Yann Vitasse; Zhenzhong Zeng; Ivan A. Janssens

Earlier spring leaf unfolding is a frequently observed response of plants to climate warming. Many deciduous tree species require chilling for dormancy release, and warming-related reductions in chilling may counteract the advance of leaf unfolding in response to warming. Empirical evidence for this, however, is limited to saplings or twigs in climate-controlled chambers. Using long-term in situ observations of leaf unfolding for seven dominant European tree species at 1,245 sites, here we show that the apparent response of leaf unfolding to climate warming (ST, expressed in days advance of leaf unfolding per °C warming) has significantly decreased from 1980 to 2013 in all monitored tree species. Averaged across all species and sites, ST decreased by 40% from 4.0 ± 1.8 days °C−1 during 1980–1994 to 2.3 ± 1.6 days °C−1 during 1999–2013. The declining ST was also simulated by chilling-based phenology models, albeit with a weaker decline (24–30%) than observed in situ. The reduction in ST is likely to be partly attributable to reduced chilling. Nonetheless, other mechanisms may also have a role, such as ‘photoperiod limitation’ mechanisms that may become ultimately limiting when leaf unfolding dates occur too early in the season. Our results provide empirical evidence for a declining ST, but also suggest that the predicted strong winter warming in the future may further reduce ST and therefore result in a slowdown in the advance of tree spring phenology.


Global Change Biology | 2015

Detection and attribution of vegetation greening trend in China over the last 30 years

Shilong Piao; Guodong Yin; Jianguang Tan; Lei Cheng; Mengtian Huang; Yue Li; Ronggao Liu; Jiafu Mao; Ranga B. Myneni; Shushi Peng; Ben Poulter; Xiaoying Shi; Zhiqiang Xiao; Ning Zeng; Zhenzhong Zeng; Ying-Ping Wang

The reliable detection and attribution of changes in vegetation growth is a prerequisite for the development of strategies for the sustainable management of ecosystems. This is an extraordinary challenge. To our knowledge, this study is the first to comprehensively detect and attribute a greening trend in China over the last three decades. We use three different satellite-derived Leaf Area Index (LAI) datasets for detection as well as five different process-based ecosystem models for attribution. Rising atmospheric CO2 concentration and nitrogen deposition are identified as the most likely causes of the greening trend in China, explaining 85% and 41% of the average growing-season LAI trend (LAIGS) estimated by satellite datasets (average trend of 0.0070 yr(-1), ranging from 0.0035 yr(-1) to 0.0127 yr(-1)), respectively. The contribution of nitrogen deposition is more clearly seen in southern China than in the north of the country. Models disagree about the contribution of climate change alone to the trend in LAIGS at the country scale (one model shows a significant increasing trend, whereas two others show significant decreasing trends). However, the models generally agree on the negative impacts of climate change in north China and Inner Mongolia and the positive impact in the Qinghai-Xizang plateau. Provincial forest area change tends to be significantly correlated with the trend of LAIGS (P < 0.05), and marginally significantly (P = 0.07) correlated with the residual of LAIGS trend, calculated as the trend observed by satellite minus that estimated by models through considering the effects of climate change, rising CO2 concentration and nitrogen deposition, across different provinces. This result highlights the important role of Chinas afforestation program in explaining the spatial patterns of trend in vegetation growth.


Nature Communications | 2014

Evidence for a weakening relationship between interannual temperature variability and northern vegetation activity.

Shilong Piao; Huijuan Nan; Chris Huntingford; Philippe Ciais; Pierre Friedlingstein; Stephen Sitch; Shushi Peng; Anders Ahlström; Josep G. Canadell; Nan Cong; Sam Levis; Peter E. Levy; Lingli Liu; Mark R. Lomas; Jiafu Mao; Ranga B. Myneni; Philippe Peylin; Ben Poulter; Xiaoying Shi; Guodong Yin; Nicolas Viovy; Tao Wang; Wang X; Soenke Zaehle; Ning Zeng; Zhenzhong Zeng; Anping Chen

Satellite-derived Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (NDVI), a proxy of vegetation productivity, is known to be correlated with temperature in northern ecosystems. This relationship, however, may change over time following alternations in other environmental factors. Here we show that above 30°N, the strength of the relationship between the interannual variability of growing season NDVI and temperature (partial correlation coefficient RNDVI-GT) declined substantially between 1982 and 2011. This decrease in RNDVI-GT is mainly observed in temperate and arctic ecosystems, and is also partly reproduced by process-based ecosystem model results. In the temperate ecosystem, the decrease in RNDVI-GT coincides with an increase in drought. In the arctic ecosystem, it may be related to a nonlinear response of photosynthesis to temperature, increase of hot extreme days and shrub expansion over grass-dominated tundra. Our results caution the use of results from interannual time scales to constrain the decadal response of plants to ongoing warming.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Evaporative cooling over the Tibetan Plateau induced by vegetation growth

Miaogen Shen; Shilong Piao; Su-Jong Jeong; Liming Zhou; Zhenzhong Zeng; Philippe Ciais; Deliang Chen; Mengtian Huang; Chun-Sil Jin; Laurent Li; Yue Li; Ranga B. Myneni; Kun Yang; Gengxin Zhang; Yangjian Zhang; Tandong Yao

Significance Understanding land-surface biophysical feedbacks to the atmosphere is needed if we are to simulate regional climate accurately. In the Arctic, previous studies have shown that enhanced vegetation growth decreases albedo and amplifies warming. In contrast, on the Tibetan Plateau, a statistical model based on in situ observations and decomposition of the surface energy budget suggests that increased vegetation activity may attenuate daytime warming by enhancing evapotranspiration (ET), a cooling process. A regional climate model also simulates daytime cooling when prescribed with increased vegetation activity, but with a magnitude smaller than observed, likely because this model simulates weaker ET enhancement in response to increased vegetation growth. In the Arctic, climate warming enhances vegetation activity by extending the length of the growing season and intensifying maximum rates of productivity. In turn, increased vegetation productivity reduces albedo, which causes a positive feedback on temperature. Over the Tibetan Plateau (TP), regional vegetation greening has also been observed in response to recent warming. Here, we show that in contrast to arctic regions, increased growing season vegetation activity over the TP may have attenuated surface warming. This negative feedback on growing season vegetation temperature is attributed to enhanced evapotranspiration (ET). The extra energy available at the surface, which results from lower albedo, is efficiently dissipated by evaporative cooling. The net effect is a decrease in daily maximum temperature and the diurnal temperature range, which is supported by statistical analyses of in situ observations and by decomposition of the surface energy budget. A daytime cooling effect from increased vegetation activity is also modeled from a set of regional weather research and forecasting (WRF) mesoscale model simulations, but with a magnitude smaller than observed, likely because the WRF model simulates a weaker ET enhancement. Our results suggest that actions to restore native grasslands in degraded areas, roughly one-third of the plateau, will both facilitate a sustainable ecological development in this region and have local climate cobenefits. More accurate simulations of the biophysical coupling between the land surface and the atmosphere are needed to help understand regional climate change over the TP, and possible larger scale feedbacks between climate in the TP and the Asian monsoon system.


Nature Communications | 2015

Leaf onset in the northern hemisphere triggered by daytime temperature

Shilong Piao; Jianguang Tan; Anping Chen; Yongshuo H. Fu; Philippe Ciais; Qiang Liu; Ivan A. Janssens; Sara Vicca; Zhenzhong Zeng; Su-Jong Jeong; Yue Li; Ranga B. Myneni; Shushi Peng; Miaogen Shen; Josep Peñuelas

Recent warming significantly advanced leaf onset in the northern hemisphere. This signal cannot be accurately reproduced by current models parameterized by daily mean temperature (Tmean). Here using in situ observations of leaf unfolding dates (LUDs) in Europe and the United States, we show that the interannual anomalies of LUD during 1982–2011 are triggered by daytime (Tmax) more than by nighttime temperature (Tmin). Furthermore, an increase of 1 °C in Tmax would advance LUD by 4.7 days in Europe and 4.3 days in the United States, more than the conventional temperature sensitivity estimated from Tmean. The triggering role of Tmax, rather than the Tmin or Tmean variable, is also supported by analysis of the large-scale patterns of satellite-derived vegetation green-up in spring in the northern hemisphere (>30°N). Our results suggest a new conceptual framework of leaf onset using daytime temperature to improve the performance of phenology modules in current Earth system models.


Environmental Research Letters | 2012

Global evapotranspiration over the past three decades: estimation based on the water balance equation combined with empirical models

Zhenzhong Zeng; Shilong Piao; Xin Lin; Guodong Yin; Shushi Peng; Philippe Ciais; Ranga B. Myneni

We applied a land water mass balance equation over 59 major river basins during 2003‐9 to estimate evapotranspiration (ET), using as input terrestrial water storage anomaly (TWSA) data from the GRACE satellites, precipitation and in situ runoff measurements. We found that the terrestrial water storage change cannot be neglected in the estimation of ET on an annual time step, especially in areas with relatively low ET values. We developed a spatial regression model of ET by integrating precipitation, temperature and satellite-derived normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) data, and used this model to extrapolate the spatio-temporal patterns of changes in ET from 1982 to 2009. We found that the globally averaged land ET is about 604 mm yr 1 with a range of 558‐650 mm yr 1 . From 1982 to 2009, global land ET was found to increase at a rate of 1.10 mm yr 2 , with the Amazon regions and Southeast Asia showing the highest ET increasing trend. Further analyses, however, show that the increase in global land ET mainly occurred between the 1980s and the 1990s. The trend over the 2000s, its magnitude or even the sign of change substantially depended on the choice of the beginning year. This suggests a non-significant trend in global land ET over the last decade.


Nature | 2016

The contribution of China's emissions to global climate forcing.

Bengang Li; Thomas Gasser; Philippe Ciais; Shilong Piao; Shu Tao; Yves Balkanski; D. A. Hauglustaine; Juan-Pablo Boisier; Zhuo Chen; Mengtian Huang; Laurent Li; Yue Li; Hongyan Liu; Junfeng Liu; Shushi Peng; Zehao Shen; Zhenzhong Sun; Rong Wang; Tao Wang; Guodong Yin; Yi Yin; Hui Zeng; Zhenzhong Zeng; Feng Zhou

Knowledge of the contribution that individual countries have made to global radiative forcing is important to the implementation of the agreement on “common but differentiated responsibilities” reached by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Over the past three decades, China has experienced rapid economic development, accompanied by increased emission of greenhouse gases, ozone precursors and aerosols, but the magnitude of the associated radiative forcing has remained unclear. Here we use a global coupled biogeochemistry–climate model and a chemistry and transport model to quantify China’s present-day contribution to global radiative forcing due to well-mixed greenhouse gases, short-lived atmospheric climate forcers and land-use-induced regional surface albedo changes. We find that China contributes 10% ± 4% of the current global radiative forcing. China’s relative contribution to the positive (warming) component of global radiative forcing, mainly induced by well-mixed greenhouse gases and black carbon aerosols, is 12% ± 2%. Its relative contribution to the negative (cooling) component is 15% ± 6%, dominated by the effect of sulfate and nitrate aerosols. China’s strongest contributions are 0.16 ± 0.02 watts per square metre for CO2 from fossil fuel burning, 0.13 ± 0.05 watts per square metre for CH4, −0.11 ± 0.05 watts per square metre for sulfate aerosols, and 0.09 ± 0.06 watts per square metre for black carbon aerosols. China’s eventual goal of improving air quality will result in changes in radiative forcing in the coming years: a reduction of sulfur dioxide emissions would drive a faster future warming, unless offset by larger reductions of radiative forcing from well-mixed greenhouse gases and black carbon.


Environmental Research Letters | 2015

Disentangling climatic and anthropogenic controls on global terrestrial evapotranspiration trends

Jiafu Mao; Wenting Fu; Xiaoying Shi; Daniel M. Ricciuto; Joshua B. Fisher; Robert E. Dickinson; Yaxing Wei; Willis Shem; Shilong Piao; Kaicun Wang; Christopher R. Schwalm; Hanqin Tian; Mingquan Mu; Altaf Arain; Philippe Ciais; R. B. Cook; Yongjiu Dai; Daniel J. Hayes; Forrest M. Hoffman; Maoyi Huang; Suo Huang; Deborah N. Huntzinger; Akihiko Ito; Atul K. Jain; Anthony W. King; Huimin Lei; Chaoqun Lu; Anna M. Michalak; N. C. Parazoo; Changhui Peng

We examined natural and anthropogenic controls on terrestrial evapotranspiration (ET) changes from 1982 to 2010 using multiple estimates from remote sensing-based datasets and process-oriented land surface models. A significant increasing trend of ET in each hemisphere was consistently revealed by observationally-constrained data and multi-model ensembles that considered historic natural and anthropogenic drivers. The climate impacts were simulated to determine the spatiotemporal variations in ET. Globally, rising CO2 ranked second in these models after the predominant climatic influences, and yielded decreasing trends in canopy transpiration and ET, especially for tropical forests and high-latitude shrub land. Increasing nitrogen deposition slightly amplified global ET via enhanced plant growth. Land-use-induced ET responses, albeit with substantial uncertainties across the factorial analysis, were minor globally, but pronounced locally, particularly over regions with intensive land-cover changes. Our study highlights the importance of employing multi-stream ET and ET-component estimates to quantify the strengthening anthropogenic fingerprint in the global hydrologic cycle.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

A worldwide analysis of spatiotemporal changes in water balance‐based evapotranspiration from 1982 to 2009

Zhenzhong Zeng; Tao Wang; Feng Zhou; Philippe Ciais; Jiafu Mao; Xiaoying Shi; Shilong Piao

A satellite-based water balance method is developed to model global evapotranspiration (ET) through coupling a water balance (WB) model with a machine-learning algorithm (the model tree ensemble, MTE) (hereafterWB-MTE). TheWB-MTE algorithmwas firstly trained by combiningmonthlyWB-estimated basin ET with the potential drivers (e.g., radiation, temperature, precipitation, wind speed, and vegetation index) across 95 large river basins (5824 basin-months) and then applied to establish global monthly ETmaps at a spatial resolution of 0.5° from 1982 to 2009. The global land ET estimated from WB-MTE has an annual mean of 593±17mm for 1982–2009, with a spatial distribution consistent with previous studies in all latitudes but the tropics. The ET estimated by WB-MTE also shows significant linear trends in both annual and seasonal global ET during 1982–2009, though the trends seem to have stalled after 1998. Moreover, our study presents a striking difference from the previous ones primarily in the magnitude of ET estimates during the wet season particularly in the tropics, where ET is highly uncertain due to lack of direct measurements. This may be tied to their lack of proper consideration to solar radiation and/or the rainfall interception process. By contrast, in the dry season, our estimate of ET compares well with the previous ones, both for the mean state and the variability. If we are to reduce the uncertainties in estimating ET, these results emphasize the necessity of deploying more observations during the wet season, particularly in the tropics.

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Philippe Ciais

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jiafu Mao

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Xiaoying Shi

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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