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Impact of atmospheric CO2 levels on continental silicate weathering

Anthropogenic sources are widely accepted as the dominant cause for the increase in atmospheric CO2 concentrations since the beginning of the industrial revolution. Here we use the B‐WITCH model to quantify the impact of increased CO2 concentrations on CO2 consumption by weathering of continental su...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems : G3 geophysics, geosystems : G3, 2010-07, Vol.11 (7), p.n/a
Main Authors: Beaulieu, E., Goddéris, Y., Labat, D., Roelandt, C., Oliva, P., Guerrero, B.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Anthropogenic sources are widely accepted as the dominant cause for the increase in atmospheric CO2 concentrations since the beginning of the industrial revolution. Here we use the B‐WITCH model to quantify the impact of increased CO2 concentrations on CO2 consumption by weathering of continental surfaces. B‐WITCH couples a dynamic biogeochemistry model (LPJ) and a process‐based numerical model of continental weathering (WITCH). It allows simultaneous calculations of the different components of continental weathering fluxes, terrestrial vegetation dynamics, and carbon and water fluxes. The CO2 consumption rates are estimated at four different atmospheric CO2 concentrations, from 280 up to 1120 ppmv, for 22 sites characterized by silicate lithologies (basalt, granite, or sandstones). The sensitivity to atmospheric CO2 variations is explored, while temperature and rainfall are held constant. First, we show that under 355 ppmv of atmospheric CO2, B‐WITCH is able to reproduce the global pattern of weathering rates as a function of annual runoff, mean annual temperature, or latitude for silicate lithologies. When atmospheric CO2 increases, evapotranspiration generally decreases due to progressive stomatal closure, and the soil CO2 pressure increases due to enhanced biospheric productivity. As a result, vertical drainage and soil acidity increase, promoting CO2 consumption by mineral weathering. We calculate an increase of about 3% of the CO2 consumption through silicate weathering (mol ha−1 yr−1) for 100 ppmv rise in CO2. Importantly, the sensitivity of the weathering system to the CO2 rise is not uniform and heavily depends on the climatic, lithologic, pedologic, and biospheric settings.
ISSN:1525-2027
1525-2027
DOI:10.1029/2010GC003078