Monitoring the Multiple Stages of Climate Tipping Systems from Space: Do the GCOS Essential Climate Variables Meet the Needs?

IF 4.9 2区 地球科学 Q1 GEOCHEMISTRY & GEOPHYSICS
S. Loriani, A. Bartsch, E. Calamita, J. F. Donges, S. Hebden, M. Hirota, A. Landolfi, T. Nagler, B. Sakschewski, A. Staal, J. Verbesselt, R. Winkelmann, R. Wood, N. Wunderling
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Abstract

Many components of the Earth system feature self-reinforcing feedback processes that can potentially scale up a small initial change to a fundamental state change of the underlying system in a sometimes abrupt or irreversible manner beyond a critical threshold. Such tipping points can be found across a wide range of spatial and temporal scales and are expressed in very different observable variables. For example, early-warning signals of approaching critical transitions may manifest in localised spatial pattern formation of vegetation within years as observed for the Amazon rainforest. In contrast, the susceptibility of ice sheets to tipping dynamics can unfold at basin to sub-continental scales, over centuries to even millennia. Accordingly, to improve the understanding of the underlying processes, to capture present-day system states and to monitor early-warning signals, tipping point science relies on diverse data products. To that end, Earth observation has proven indispensable as it provides a broad range of data products with varying spatio-temporal scales and resolutions. Here we review the observable characteristics of selected potential climate tipping systems associated with the multiple stages of a tipping process: This includes i) gaining system and process understanding, ii) detecting early-warning signals for resilience loss when approaching potential tipping points and iii) monitoring progressing tipping dynamics across scales in space and time. By assessing how well the observational requirements are met by the Essential Climate Variables (ECVs) defined by the Global Climate Observing System (GCOS), we identify gaps in the portfolio and what is needed to better characterise potential candidate tipping elements. Gaps have been identified for the Amazon forest system (vegetation water content), permafrost (ground subsidence), Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, AMOC (section mass, heat and fresh water transports and freshwater input from ice sheet edges) and ice sheets (e.g. surface melt). For many of the ECVs, issues in specifications have been identified. Of main concern are spatial resolution and missing variables, calling for an update of the ECVS or a separate, dedicated catalogue of tipping variables.

从空间监测气候突变系统的多个阶段:GCOS的基本气候变量满足需要吗?
地球系统的许多组成部分都具有自我强化的反馈过程,这些过程可能以超过临界阈值的有时是突然或不可逆的方式,将微小的初始变化扩大到基础系统的基本状态变化。这样的临界点可以在广泛的空间和时间尺度上找到,并以非常不同的可观察变量表示。例如,正如在亚马逊雨林所观察到的那样,即将到来的关键转变的早期预警信号可能在几年内在局部植被空间格局的形成中表现出来。相比之下,冰盖对倾斜动力学的敏感性可以在盆地到次大陆的尺度上展开,持续几个世纪甚至几千年。因此,为了提高对潜在过程的理解,捕捉当前系统状态并监测早期预警信号,临界点科学依赖于各种数据产品。为此目的,地球观测已被证明是不可或缺的,因为它提供了具有不同时空尺度和分辨率的广泛数据产品。在此,我们回顾了与临界点过程的多个阶段相关的选定的潜在气候临界点系统的可观测特征:这包括i)获得系统和过程的理解,ii)在接近潜在临界点时检测恢复力损失的早期预警信号,以及iii)在空间和时间尺度上监测不断发展的临界点动态。通过评估全球气候观测系统(GCOS)定义的基本气候变量(ecv)满足观测要求的程度,我们确定了组合中的差距,以及更好地描述潜在候选临界点要素所需的内容。已经确定了亚马逊森林系统(植被含水量)、永久冻土(地面沉降)、大西洋经向翻转环流、AMOC(剖面质量、热量和淡水输送以及来自冰盖边缘的淡水输入)和冰盖(如地表融化)的空白。对于许多ecv,规范中的问题已经被确定。主要关注的是空间分辨率和缺失变量,要求更新ECVS或单独的,专门的提示变量目录。
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来源期刊
Surveys in Geophysics
Surveys in Geophysics 地学-地球化学与地球物理
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
10.90%
发文量
64
审稿时长
4.5 months
期刊介绍: Surveys in Geophysics publishes refereed review articles on the physical, chemical and biological processes occurring within the Earth, on its surface, in its atmosphere and in the near-Earth space environment, including relations with other bodies in the solar system. Observations, their interpretation, theory and modelling are covered in papers dealing with any of the Earth and space sciences.
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