Diffuse radiation forcing constraints on gross primary productivity and
global terrestrial evapotranspiration
Abstract
The diffuse radiation fertilization effect – the increase in plant
productivity in the presence of higher diffuse radiation (K↓,d) – is an
important yet understudied aspect of atmosphere-biosphere interactions
and can modify the terrestrial carbon, energy, and water budgets. The
K↓,d fertilization effect links the carbon cycle with clouds and
aerosols, all of which are large sources of uncertainties for our
current understanding of the Earth system and for future climate
projections. Here we establish to what extent observational and modeling
uncertainty in sunlight’s diffuse fraction (kd) affects simulated gross
primary productivity (GPP) and terrestrial evapotranspiration (λE). We
find only 48 eddy covariance sites with simultaneous sufficient
measurements of K↓,d with none in the tropical climate zone, making it
difficult to constrain this mechanism globally using observations. Using
a land modeling framework based on the latest version of the Community
Land Model, we find that global GPP ranges from 114 Pg C year-1 when
using kd forcing from the MERRA-2 reanalysis to a ~7%
higher value of 122 Pg C year-1 when using the CERES satellite product,
with especially strong differences apparent over the tropical region
(mean increase ~9%). The differences in λE, although
smaller (-0.4%) due to competing changes in shaded and sunlit leaf
transpiration, can be greater than regional impacts of individual
forcing agents like aerosols. Our results demonstrate the importance of
comprehensively and systematically validating the simulated kd by
atmosphere modules as well as the response differences in diffuse
fraction within land modules across Earth System Models.