Opening Pandora's box: reducing global circulation model uncertainty in Australian simulations of the carbon cycle

Lina Teckentrup, M. D. De Kauwe, G. Abramowitz, A. Pitman, A. Ukkola, Sanaa Hobeichi, Bastien François, Benjamin Smith
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Abstract

Abstract. Climate projections from global circulation models (GCMs), part of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project 6 (CMIP6), are often employed to study the impact of future climate on ecosystems. However, especially at regional scales, climate projections display large biases in key forcing variables such as temperature and precipitation. These biases have been identified as a major source of uncertainty in carbon cycle projections, hampering predictive capacity. In this study, we open the proverbial Pandora's box and peer under the lid of strategies to tackle climate model ensemble uncertainty. We employ a dynamic global vegetation model (LPJ-GUESS) and force it with raw output from CMIP6 to assess the uncertainty associated with the choice of climate forcing. We then test different methods to either bias-correct or calculate ensemble averages over the original forcing data to reduce the climate-driven uncertainty in the regional projection of the Australian carbon cycle. We find that all bias correction methods reduce the bias of continental averages of steady-state carbon variables. Bias correction can improve model carbon outputs, but carbon pools are insensitive to the type of bias correction method applied for both individual GCMs and the arithmetic ensemble average across all corrected models. None of the bias correction methods consistently improve the change in simulated carbon over time compared to the target dataset, highlighting the need to account for temporal properties in correction or ensemble-averaging methods. Multivariate bias correction methods tend to reduce the uncertainty more than univariate approaches, although the overall magnitude is similar. Even after correcting the bias in the meteorological forcing dataset, the simulated vegetation distribution presents different patterns when different GCMs are used to drive LPJ-GUESS. Additionally, we found that both the weighted ensemble-averaging and random forest approach reduce the bias in total ecosystem carbon to almost zero, clearly outperforming the arithmetic ensemble-averaging method. The random forest approach also produces the results closest to the target dataset for the change in the total carbon pool, seasonal carbon fluxes, emphasizing that machine learning approaches are promising tools for future studies. This highlights that, where possible, an arithmetic ensemble average should be avoided. However, potential target datasets that would facilitate the application of machine learning approaches, i.e., that cover both the spatial and temporal domain required to derive a robust informed ensemble average, are sparse for ecosystem variables.
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打开潘多拉的盒子:减少澳大利亚碳循环模拟中全球循环模式的不确定性
摘要全球环流模式(GCMs)的气候预估是耦合模式比对项目6 (CMIP6)的一部分,经常用于研究未来气候对生态系统的影响。然而,特别是在区域尺度上,气候预估在温度和降水等关键强迫变量上显示出很大的偏差。这些偏差已被确定为碳循环预测不确定性的主要来源,阻碍了预测能力。在这项研究中,我们打开了众所周知的潘多拉盒子,并在解决气候模型集合不确定性的策略的盖子下进行了研究。我们采用了一个全球植被动态模型(LPJ-GUESS),并将其与CMIP6的原始输出相结合,以评估与气候强迫选择相关的不确定性。然后,我们测试了不同的方法来修正偏差或计算原始强迫数据的总体平均值,以减少澳大利亚碳循环区域预测中气候驱动的不确定性。我们发现所有的偏置校正方法都降低了大陆平均稳态碳变量的偏置。偏差校正可以改善模型碳输出,但碳库对单个gcm和所有校正模型的算术集合平均所采用的偏差校正方法类型不敏感。与目标数据集相比,没有一种偏差校正方法能够持续改善模拟碳随时间的变化,这突出了在校正或总体平均方法中考虑时间特性的必要性。多元偏倚校正方法比单变量方法更倾向于减少不确定性,尽管总体大小相似。即使在修正了气象强迫数据的偏差后,不同gcm驱动LPJ-GUESS的模拟植被分布也呈现出不同的模式。此外,我们发现加权综合平均和随机森林方法都将生态系统总碳的偏差降低到几乎为零,明显优于算术综合平均方法。随机森林方法还产生了与总碳库变化、季节碳通量的目标数据集最接近的结果,强调机器学习方法是未来研究的有前途的工具。这突出表明,在可能的情况下,应该避免算术综合平均。然而,对于生态系统变量来说,潜在的目标数据集是稀疏的,这些数据集可以促进机器学习方法的应用,即涵盖空间和时间域,以获得稳健的信息集合平均值。
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