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Showing papers by "J. V. Revadekar published in 2021"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used surface CO2 flux observations and satellite retrieved columnar and mid-tropospheric CO2 concentrations to understand atmospheric CO2 variability and its transport patterns with anomalously high-temperature events such as heatwave conditions over India.
Abstract: The terrestrial biosphere plays a pivotal role in removing carbon from the atmosphere. The removal processes are primarily affected by the presence of extreme temperature in the atmosphere. Little information is available on carbon removal response by the terrestrial biosphere during extreme temperature events over the Indian region. India has witnessed frequent and intense heatwaves in the recent past, and future projections about the frequency of heatwave occurrence suggest a further increase in the changing climate scenario. This study used surface CO2 flux observations and satellite retrieved columnar and mid-tropospheric CO2 concentrations to understand atmospheric CO2 variability and its transport patterns with anomalously high-temperature events such as heatwave conditions over India. Intensification of temperature up to 32 °C has increased the atmosphere-biosphere CO2 fluxes (carbon sink). But further intensification in temperature (> 32–33 °C), like those observed during heatwaves, tends to drive the ecosystem to act as a CO2 source into the atmosphere due to reduced ability to absorb atmospheric CO2. Such excess CO2 fluxes may lead to change in the atmospheric CO2 concentration via atmospheric circulation or the vertical transport of the air masses from the near-surface to the upper levels in the atmosphere. The satellite observed CO2 concentration is elevated by 2–3 ppm during the heatwave conditions over India. The impact of extreme temperature on the biospheric sink capability in the carbon cycle, leading to an increase in the atmospheric CO2 concentration, is one of the significant outcomes of this study.