top of page

Professor Shunlin Liang’s recent publication in Nature

  • 24 hours ago
  • 1 min read

Updated: 7 hours ago

The size of tropical vegetation gross primary production


Link to the paper:


Abstract:

Satellite-based optical observations have converged to show average estimates of global contemporary gross primary production (GPP), the photosynthetic assimilation of atmospheric CO2 by terrestrial vegetation, at 120–140 petagrams of carbon per year (PgC yr−1). This consensus was challenged by a recent modelling study conducted by Lai et al.4 that posits a higher global estimate of 157 ± 8.5 PgC yr−1, revealing a pronounced discrepancy in the tropics where modelled fluxes of 79 PgC yr−1 exceed satellite-derived values by a factor of 1.33–1.85. We show that the global estimate of Lai et al.4 is extrapolated spatially based on a temporal relationship between the ratio of carbonyl sulfide (OCS) to CO2 fluxes (hereafter, the leaf relative uptake, LRU) and photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) from a single boreal station and also neglects considerable negative influences of vapour pressure deficit (VPD). This finding underscores the need for accounting for both spatial heterogeneity and climatic constraints when upscaling site-level relationship to the global scale, warranting the necessity of a comprehensive worldwide validation for global estimates.


Nature Portfolio slide with Nature cover featuring a colorful skull and the title The size of tropical vegetation gross primary production

 
 
Textured Paper Surface

 INTERDISCIPLINARY INITIATIVES 

GGAS.png
GEOG1931 copy_edited_edited.png
cube logo.png
glass logo -black.png
ICCDS_edited.png
ITS (new).png
JLFC [logo] -1.png
  • Instagram
  • WeChat
  • Facebook
  • Youtube
  • x

HKU Geography

Home

General Enquiry: 
Room 10.23
geog@hku.hk

UG Enquiry & Classwork Submission:
Room 10.48
geogug@hku.hk

10F, The Jockey Club Tower,
Centennial Campus,
Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong

CoWIN logo.png

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

© 2026 by Department of Geography, The University of Hong Kong.

bottom of page